Welcome to SC Ghosts!

Here at the Springfield's Casa, we love to entertain company and the best way to entertain guests is to tell stories! Ghost stories! Real, honest, no joke ghost stories!

So, come in, kick back and allow your unbelief to be left at the door, for when you enter here you enter for your own enjoyment.

Welcome.
Oh. If the phone rings .. take a message. It may be really long distance.




Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Setting Up With Annie

The day was finally coming to a close; the friends had mostly all gone home and the house was quiet.  Not necessarily a bad thing, but not necessarily good, either.  Not when you are the one left to sit up with the dead from eleven pm till three in the morning.
Her best friend for the last 20 years, Annie had died just two days past and today had been brought from the funeral home to the family house for viewing and a wake.  This was still the custom in the rural areas of South Carolina in the mid 1940's.  The family had been worn out after greeting all the neighbors and friends that had come to pay their respects.  Of course, many of them were just there for the food and maybe a nip from Mr. Ramsey's flask.  He really wasn't much of a drinker, but once in a while you could see him and some friend or another slip quietly outside to "get some air."
Miss Doris had sat next to the coffin from dark till eleven that evening and she had just gone upstairs to her bed for the night.  Louise was up from Georgia and she would be relieving Jolynn at three.
Technically, it was relatives that were supposed to do the sitting up, but they all thought of Jolynn as just another of the family.  It had been that way since she met Annie.
They had met at the corner store just a few days after Annie and her mother, father and the rest had moved into the area twenty years back.  They had become fast friends and remained that way from then on.  It was rumored at the one room school they attended that they were really sisters, switched at birth and just now reunited.  It was also rumored that they had started the story.  They never denied it.  Mostly they giggled about it in the quiet places where they would meet and discuss all the things proper young ladies didn't talk about.  Like, well, you know.  Sometimes they would spend the night at each other’s house and sit most of the night just talking or being quiet and growing into adulthood.
In that respect, this night was like so many others.  Just she and Annie, friends.
Jolynn enjoyed visiting with Annie.  There were always people coming and going.  There was the house, as well.  Big, like the family.  It seemed to have a character all its own.  It was an old two story kind of farmhouse, though there was really no farm attached to it.  A large front porch spanned the entire front with the door set right in the middle to balance it out.  As you entered the main hall, Annie’s room was to the left, looking over the porch.  She and her husband, M. L. had occupied it since moving in when Annie came down sick.  Originally, it had been the living room, and would be, again.   Across the hall was Nellie's room.  She was Annie's little sister and one of Jolynn's favorites.  She’d had polio and walked with crutches, but was still a lot of fun.
When Annie died a couple of days back, Jolynn was devastated.  She cried throughout the night.  Her young husband was no help at all.  He kept trying to get her to eat or drink or some such nonsense.  All she wanted was for him to leave her alone and let her get these terrible feelings out of her heart!  After hours of his unqualified failure to ease her burdens, John acquiesced and let her be.  Some things are only possible if done alone.  Once done with the crying, she made her way to the house to help in any way she could. 
Now she sat, with her book on her lap and her memory in her past.  Just she and Annie.  She was thinking about some of the times they had sat and talked well into the night as girls.  Talked about everything and nothing.  They had planned out their futures and decided what kind of husbands they were going to have and how many children.  So far, she’d had none.
They would ramble on until they fell quiet or began telling ghost stories.  They would try to out do each other.  They would compete to see who could tell the scariest.  This was where her mind had settled when the grandfather clock in the hall struck 1a.m.
As the chime faded away, she heard another sound that froze her to the chair.  It was the rustle of fabric as it was moved.  She glanced to her left just as Annie sat straight up in the casket!  Every nerve in Jolynn screamed run, but she did not move.  Not until the next sound.  This was a great, sad, hollow moan … from Annie.  Then Jolynn made for the door.  She later said that she only touched the floor once from where she sat to the porch, she was so scared.
When they found Jolynn an hour or so later, it was down the road, in her house, at the back in her bedroom, hidden behind her bed.  Her scream had woken the whole first floor and they had rushed to see what had happened.  When they got to the front room, they had discovered a still dead Annie, sitting up and an empty chair where Jolynn had been a few minutes earlier. 
Jolynn said that at the time of this incident, she had been remembering the $5.00 she had borrowed from Annie a few days prior and was certain that Annie had returned from the dead to claim the debt.  Jolynn never came to the Henderson home again, though she said that she just never had the time.
When Annie died a couple of days back, Jolynn was devastated.  She cried throughout the night.  Her young husband was no help at all.  He kept trying to get her to eat or drink or some such nonsense.  All she wanted was for him to leave her alone and let her get these terrible feelings out of her heart!  After hours of his unqualified failure to ease her burdens, John acquiesced and let her be.  Some things are only possible if done alone.