The ghost on the rooftop!
Written
by Dr.Laxmi Iyer
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The sound
of the monster from the bungalow next door shook
her awake from a deep slumber. Eleven year old Harriet
trembled with fear. She jumped out of her bed...beads
of perspiration gushing like a river down her face.
Boom!
Boom! Clinkety! Clank! Clinkety! Clank! It was the
same sound...in the same sequence.
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For the past fortnight, almost every other
day, she had been waking up trembling from head to foot.
With an alarmed scream, she would run to her grandma's room.
And her grandma would comfort her. It was the same scene
everyday.
Harriet had come to her granny's place to
spend the summer holidays. And granny had a family of cats
- nearly eleven of them - a complete cricket team of cats,
so to say. They would be all over the house - lounging about
on the sofa, in the bedroom, study...every where you looked,
you would see a cat.
Harriet loved cats. For Harriet being with
the cats was a very soothing experience. When she had been
a baby, a Siamese cat - Fog had been her constant companion.
Her mother was an artist and her dad a sculptor.
They would be absorbed in their creative
work while Harriet would be baby sat by Fog. Ever since
her bawling, crawling, crying baby days, whenever Harriet
was shown Fog, her crying would stop.
That was how the remarkable bond of attachment
between Fog and Harriet developed and Harriet's instinctive
love for cats.
Her family had soon discovered, that whenever
they needed to quieten Harriet, all they had to do was call
Fog.
And what a remarkable baby sitter Fog would
be, she would sit by Harriet patiently, keeping her eyes
wide open, and whenever she noticed that Harriet was having
any discomfort, she would mew loudly and walk over to Harriet's
mum or dad.
With that understanding Fog had perfected
her communication skills with her foster family.
However, this time her parents had not allowed
Fog to accompany her. The instructions were clear. Harriet
was to spend her holidays with her grand mum and her cricket
team of cats.
On her visit this time, Harriet noticed
that the bungalow next door had been vacated.
There was an eerie stillness and silence that bounded off
the bungalow walls right into Harriet's heart.
Each passing day, Harriet was getting more
and more frightened. It was impossible for her to communicate
with her parents since they along with Fog had decided to
spend their summer holidays in the wilderness of the Kalahari
desert in Africa. No emails. No mobiles. No way Harriet
could talk to her mum and dad and tell them about the ghost
in the next bungalow.
Harriet began to think that her grandma
too was very strange. She was not at all disturbed by all
these sounds. To Harriet, that felt very odd.
Harriet felt very ashamed of her fear. She
thought she would conceal it in different ways. Each day,
she thought of a new strategy.
One day, she decided she would ask her grandma
to tell her a story and then pretend to fall asleep in grandma's
bed. Just when her grandma had finished telling her story,
suddenly a question popped up in Harriet's head and she
jumped up wide awake.
" Grandma, where are all the cats?".
"Why! They must be lounging about all
over the place as usual", said Grandma.
When Harriet went in search of the cats,
she found that there were only 4 of them. Where were the
remaining seven?
She didn't have to wait long for an answer.
In the morning when she woke up, she saw from Grandma's
window facing the neighbouring bungalow, all the 7 cats
returning home - walking in single file.
The next day, Harriet decided she would
follow the cats and see how each cat slept in the night.
She carried a torch with her and just as
dusk was falling, she slipped out of the house following
the cats. In the darkness, she saw them climb up into the
deserted bungalow
rooftop and then when she flashed a torch to look, she saw
them playing enthusiastically - with small clinkety, metal
bars, balls and handles, toy swings and seesaws.
Boom! Boom! Clinkety! Clank! Clinkety! Clank!
Boom! Boom! Clinkety! Clank! Clinkety! Clank! Boom! Boom!
Clinkety! Clank! Clinkety! Clank!
It was a deafening cacophony.
Boom! Boom! Clinkety! Clank! Clinkety! Clank!
It was the same sound...in the same sequence.
Harriet was no longer afraid. She smiled
feeling a little unhappy that she was not light enough to
crawl upto the rooftop and join the cats in their game.