Involvement with an ancient Ouija Board opens a door intended to remain closed... |
THE COMMUNICATOR One cool Friday evening in October of 1977, a group of teenagers gathered at a friendâs house in Dandridge, Tennessee as they always did on Friday nights. Nearly all had been friends since elementary school, and most felt more like a family than merely friends. They were what you would call "good" kidsâthey did not get into trouble at school, they respected their eldersâthe kind of kids you would be proud to call your own. At least, most of them were. At their Friday night parties, they would stay up all night longâtalking, drinking cokes and eating pizza. They usually wound up watching the horror movie that would air without fail at 11:30 p.m. just after the local newscast. Usually, the movie would be one of the classic films of the 1960's that caused many to sleep with their lights on. At this particular gathering, it was nearly Halloween, and they were in the middle of an old Vincent Price classic when they began discussing ghosts, witches and the supernatural. They resurrected the ages-old debate of whether they are real or imagined. One of the girls (whose name was Lisa) said she knew they were real, because she had once seen a ghost at her Grandparentsâ house. âLate one night when I was about seven,â she began, âmy Grandparents and I were sitting on the back porch. We were talking about relatives, school, and other things to pass the time, when we saw a shadowy-white figure move across the backyard. As soon as I saw it, I ran in the house, they followedâ, and we watched it from the window and saw it go into the barn. We watched the barn for fifteen or twenty minutes, but never saw it again. Guys, I never knew my Grandfather to be scared of anything, but this scared him bad. It scared us all!" It was evident that even the remembrance of the events was scaring her, as she cleared her throat, looked around the room, and continued. "The next morning we ventured into the barn and found that some of the rope my Grandfather kept had been fashioned into a perfectly tied noose, and was hanging from the loft of the barn. That was too weird! I know it sounds silly, but can anybody explain it? I have thought about it ever since, and I canât begin to figure it out.â Roger, a young man who was two years older than the rest of the group was there only because these were the best friends of his younger girlfriend looked at her with a sneer and said, âYou are so stupid! What you saw was probably fog or somethingâbecause there ainât no ghosts!â âWell how do you explain the noose that was hanging in the barn? That wasnât fog!â Lisa snapped back at Roger. âAw, it was probably some kids who were playing in the barn, dummy! Who else would make a friggin' noose and hang it in a barn?" It seemed as though Roger was attempting to make himself believe what he was telling the others as he stood forcefully and said, âSomebody had to make it, because there AINâT NO DAMN GHOSTS, and youâre all idiots if you think there are!â Rogerâs girlfriend Robin was obviously embarrassed that her boyfriend was making such an ass out of himself, and she snapped, âWell, you donât have to get so mad about it, Roger!â She looked at Lisa and winked. âIf Lisa says she saw a ghost, I believe her!â Roger grimaced, shook his head from side-to-side, and said, âYeah, you would! That's about what I expected out of you...â Lisa was glad her friend had confidence in her, but she saw Roger was going to turn his anger toward his girlfriend if they kept talking about her story, and she decided to change the subject. However, before she did, her own boyfriend, Todd, entered the conversation. âWell, I donât know if ghosts are real or not. I believe once people die they either go to heaven or hellâthey donât hang around here on earth dragging chains and things like thatâŚThatâs all make-believe. But Iâll tell you one thingâI do believe there are demons! The Bible even says theyâre real.â He paused for a moment, grinning as he said, âBut to be honest, Lisa, I doubt demons would take time to make a noose to hang in your Grandfatherâs barn!â Everyone laughed except for Roger, and Juliaâthe young woman whose house they occupied. Julia had been unusually quiet since they had started this discussionâshe appeared to be troubled as she sat on the couch. She listened to their conversation, but offered no comment until Roger spoke again. âI told you little shits that there ainât no ghosts, there ainât no witches, and there ainât no demons, either! Parents tell their kids things like that to keep them too scared to get in trouble! They tell âem the devil is gonna get âem!â Roger laughed sarcastically as he shook his head in disgust. âYou are all total dumb-asses if you believe theyâre real!â Julia slowly leaned across the coffee table and stared into Rogerâs eyes. âRogerâyou donât believe in ghosts, witches, or demons, huh?â âHell no, I donât!â Roger said, growing madder by the minute. âWell, what if I can prove they exist?â she said. âHow do you think you can do that? People who are a lot smarter than you have tried to prove it for years, and no one has done it yet!â Julia looked him straight in the eyes. âI will make a believer out of you, Rogerâmake a believer out of you tonight! That I guarantee!" Tauntingly she added, âWell, whaddya say, tough guy? Are you gonna take me up on it?â Realizing that everyone would think he was a coward if he declined, he said, âGo ahead, you little bull-dyke! Iâm not scared of you, or any thing you can do!â âGood." Julia looked at Roger with a smile that suddenly seemed almost evil. It was a smile so unlike her usually cheerful grins that it actually scared her closest friends. Julia rose from the couch and said, âGo get your van started, if you think it will crank, and weâll all go down to Douglas Lake and Iâll show you what you really donât want to see, Rog.â âWhat do we have to go down there for? Canât you work your magic mumbo-jumbo here, Esmerelda?â Julia looked back over her shoulder at him as she walked toward her bedroom door and said, âI never said I would or wouldnât scare you, Rogerâthatâs not my callâŚ..I only said that I would prove to you that ghosts and demons are real. Now, go get the van, pleaseâŚUnless youâre chicken-shit!â All eyes in the room went to Roger, and everyone wondered if the 6â3â senior captain of the high school football team actually was scared. When he saw the others looking at him, he jumped off the couch and yelled, âI ainât scared of a damned thing!â He stormed out to his van, started it, and pulled it around to the front door of Juliaâs house. The shocked teenagers walked toward the van, and Robin went up to Julia and whispered in her ear, âWhat are you going to do to him, Jules?â âIâm not going to do anything to himâ, she explained. âIâm simply going to prove to him and to everyone else that the supernatural realm does exist!â They were all silent as they got into the van, and the somber mood would have suggested they might have been on their way to a funeral instead of having fun on a Friday night. As the van began to make itsâ way out of Juliaâs driveway, Todd interrupted the silence by asking Julia what she was holding in her hands. âItâs a communicatorâan old communicator. You remember old Miss Chambers, who lives on Highway 92, donât you?â They all nodded their heads in acknowledgement of the old woman of whom Julia spoke. âShe gave it to me last year. She told me her Grandmother was given the Communicator by a former slave girl that lived near their farm after the Civil War, and it had been passed down to her, instead of her mother. Miss Chambers is nearly eighty now, and she never had any children, so she gave it to me.â âIt looks like one of them âWee-Geeâ boards to me!â Todd said. âSome people call them that, Todd, but Miss Chambers told me they are actually communicatorsâbecause they are used to communicate with spirits,â Julia explained. âAnd Todd, just to be correct, the word is pronounced âWee-Jahâ, not âWee-Geeâ.â âOh, forgive me,â Todd said mockingly. I wouldnât want one of the big, bad boogers to get mad at me for mispronouncing its name!â Everyone laughed, which seemed to calm a few nerves, but made Roger worse. He felt more uneasy as they wound around every curve in the road, and as they climbed each hill. âShut up back there!â he yelled. âDo you want me to have a wreck? Good God! Where the hell are we supposed to be going anyway, Julia?â âItâs about a half mile on down the road, Roger. Youâll see a path that leads into the woods. When you see that path youâll need to pull over to the side and park right thereâ, she said. âWeâll have to walk the rest of the way.â The van moved slowly around the curvy road as if it did not want to go where itsâ driver was taking it, when Julia yelled, âThere!â, and pointed to a small footpath leading into the woods. âPull over right there.â Roger pulled the van in the narrow pull-out on the side of the road, and everyone got out of the van nervouslyâeach one wondering what was about to happen. They still were not sure what they were doing there to begin with, about to walk down a dark path through the woods to God knew where. âHey! After Julia gets finished spooking Roger, we oughta go swimming!â Todd said. âItâs too cold for that, stupid! I donât want to get Pneumonia!â Robin said. âLetâs just let Julia have her fun and letâs go back home. The next movie is supposed to be a good one!â âIâm all for thatâ, Lisa said. âIâm not too crazy about being out here in the first place.â After they had walked for about ten minutes, they came to a clearing in the woods, where they finally saw the lake. They followed Julia to a large rock that sat broodingly at the edge of the water. When Julia reached the rock, she placed the Ouija board on top of it and produced a large candle and a pack of matches from her jacket. She lit the candle and closed her eyes. She said something in a low tone that none of the others understood and picked up the candle and swung it three times to the left and three times to the right. She returned the candle to the rock and pulled a pouch from her pocket that contained some form of dark gray powder. At this point, everyone in the group was beginning to get scared. âWhatâs all this mumbo-jumbo about, Julia?â Roger demanded. âI didnât come out here to see you put on some weird magic show, you freak!â Julia did not respond to or look at Roger, but she took a small pinch of the powder and sprinkled it over the candle. When she did this, the candleâs flame grew large and bright for a brief moment, as if it were aliveâdancing and fluttering against the backdrop of the frightened faces of the onlookers. When the candleâs flame grew higher, Rogerâs underlying but potent fear grew higher as well. âLook, JuliaâI want you to tell me what youâre up to right now! Enough is enough! Whatâs this crap with the powder and the chanting?â Julia looked at him with a look of contempt and disgust as she said, âI must do that in order to summon the spirits, Rogerâto let them know we desire their presence.â âThe only thing I desire is to get out of here!â Roger said. âThis is foolish!â Julia simply ignored Roger and as she turned her back to him, she raised her arms above her head and began to move them back and forth, softly singing something in the unknown language she had used before. After she did this for a minute or two, she abruptly opened her eyes and seated herself Indian-style on the dirt in front of the Ouija board. She looked at her friends with coldness in her eyes and announced, âMy friends, the spirits are now ready to communicate with us. Everyone come closer and join hands around the rock. I will caution you of one thingâthere cannot be any talking or laughing while the spirits are presentâwe must not be disrespectful of them. Agreed?â Everyone nodded their heads in agreementâeven Rogerâwho apparently had realized the quicker they got this over with would be the quicker he would get out of there. On Juliaâs command they all joined hands, but each of them began to look at Julia with a newfound sense of fear and distrust. They were seeing a side of their friend that they never knew existed, even though they had known her since they were in first grade. The girl they now saw by candlelight was not the girl they had knownâit was a dark and scary representation of her. They each hoped within themselves that soon she would start laughing and tell them it was all a big joke, but they knew that would not happen. They realized that this had already gone too far and was much too elaborate to have been only an impulsive prank. Julia once again closed her eyes and placed one hand on the Ouijaâs pointer, and asked Lisa to place her hand on the other side, which she did. Julia hummed and swayed for a moment, and the pointer suddenly started to move! Lisaâs eyes widened and everyone knew how scared she was. The Ouijaâs pointer began to spell something out. R---O---G--- âAw, this is bull-crap! Youâre only doing that to try to scare me!â Roger said, as beads of sweat started to trickle down his forehead. âShhh! Let the spirits say what they want. So mote it be!â Julia appeared as if she were in another world as she continued swaying and chanting. The pointer began moving again, spelling E----R--------F---I---R---E. âOh, my God!â Robin screamed, deeply concerned for her boyfriend. âIt first spelled Roger, and then it spelled fire! What does it mean, Julia?â Julia was becoming scared herself as she explained, âI donât know what it means. The spirits say what they want, and I donât always know why.â Lisa removed her hand from the pointer and Julia removed hers as well. âAll right, the jokeâs over.â Todd said, actually feeling sorry for the big football hero who now sat at the edge of the circle with terror in his eyes. âYouâve scared Roger to deathâ. âYouâve scared us all, Juliaânow letâs go home.â âIt wasnât me, Toddâyou ask Lisa! The pointer moves on itsâ own! Doesnât it Lisa?â âWell, I sure didnât move it anyâit did seem to be moving on itsâ own.â Lisa was terrified, and all she wanted to do was get back in the van and get away from there. As they were talking, Robin started yelling and pointing to the Ouija boardâthe pointer was moving by itself, as no one was touching it at all! Everyone started yelling and screaming, and Julia looked to be the most scared at this point. She began to cry and she ran over and picked up the Ouija board and threw it as far as she was able to throw it into the woods, and the entire group ran back toward the van as fast as they could run. Lisa stopped about halfway to the van and looked back toward the rock, and she saw that a fire had started in the exact location where Julia had thrown the Ouija board. âEverybodyâLook back there!â she cried as she pointed toward the fire. âJulia, did you throw the candle in the woods, too?â âNoâitâs right here,â Julia replied between sobs as she showed them the candle she had used at the rock and now held in her hand. âDo you suppose thatâs what the board meant when it spelled out F-I-R-E?â Todd asked. âI donât know,â Julia said. âI only got into this stuff last year when I started going to see Miss Chambers. It was always cool beforeâI mean, it isnât supposed to do things like this! I am sorry guys, I thought it was just harmless fun. I didnât want anything bad to happen.â âItâs all right, Juliaâletâs just get out of here right now!â Robin said. The teenagers continued to run as fast as they could, and they finally made it to the van. When Roger climbed inside, he saw the fire in the woods was getting bigger. He floored the accelerator and pointed the van back toward home. The van was going about 60 mph on the narrow, winding road when all of a sudden, something flew up in front the windshield, causing Roger to run off the road and crash into a tree. Todd, Lisa, Robin and Julia were getting out of the van as it burst into flamesâwith Roger still trapped beneath the steering wheel. It took Todd a minute or two before he finally got Roger free from the vehicle. As soon as he saw him, he knew how badly Roger was burned, especially on the right side of his face. He tried to keep the girls from getting close enough to see it, but a high-pitched scream told him he had failed. "Oh my God!" screamed Robin, as she looked down at Roger's face, the flesh oozing around charred fragments of skin. "Oh my God! We've got to get some help out here!" she screamed again, and began to run hysterically down the narrow road. She didn't even know whether she was searching for someone to help them or just trying to escape. The police and the ambulance arrived moments later and took all of the teenagers to the hospital for tests and observation. Everyone was okay except for Todd, (who had received minor burns while he was getting Roger out), and Roger, who received 3rd degree burns on his arms and on one side of his face. Later that night, the luckier of the teenagers sat outside Rogerâs room talking about what happened. âI guess we know what the Ouija board meant by âfireâ and âRogerâ now, donât we?â Lisa said glumly. âLetâs donât talk about it, okay?â said Julia, the girl who obviously blamed herself for what had happened. About that time, a police officer came and seated himself on the bench beside them. He obviously wanted to verify the story of what happened one last time. They all told him about the car crash, but nothing about the events leading up to it, until Robin remembered the fire in the woods. âOfficer, there was a fire in the woods about a half mile up the road from where we crashedâ" she asked. "Has the fire department put it out yet?â The officer looked at Robin with a puzzled look, and replied, âA fire? About a half mile toward the lake, you say?â âYes,â Robin replied, âon a small path in the woods that leads to the lake.â âOkayâIâll have someone check on it.â The officer said as he turned and walked away. âYou kids try to get some rest, you hear?â They all nodded as the officer walked down the corridor of the hospital and got on the elevator. Lisa looked sternly at Robin and said, âI donât know if you should have told him about the fireâwhat if they think we started it and we get in trouble?â âIt doesnât matter,â Julia said. âAll of this is my fault, and if any problems come out of this, Iâll take the blame. I shouldnât have messed with that stuff anyway.â About thirty minutes later, the police officer came back and sat next to them again. âAre you sure you saw a fire out in the woods? With the crash and everything that happened, couldnât you be mistaken?â âNo sir, there definitely was a fire. We all saw it.â Julia said solemnly. âWell, Miss, an officer has been out there checking on it for the past half hour. He went all the way down that path to the lake, and he says the only fire heâs seen out there tonight was the one caused by your accident.â When the teenagers heard this, they all looked at each other with stunned looks on their faces, but declined to explain any further to the officer. âYou kids have had a traumatic experience, and sometimes the mind plays tricks on folks,â the officer said. âYou just do what I said, now, and get some rest.â He turned to leave, then paused and said, âThere was one peculiar thing out there on that trail, though. The officer said he did find a small pile of ashes and a plastic lensâbut saw no evidence of a fire around it or under it. Itâs probably been there for a long time.â He stared straight ahead for a moment, trying to figure out in his own mind what might have produced ashes other than a fire, but dismissed the thought from his mind, and bid the youngsters âgoodnightâ. It has been twenty-five years since these events took place, but those who experienced it will never forget it. For instance, each time he looks into a mirror, Roger is reminded that some things are better left alone. As for Julia, she never again used a Ouija board, or any communicator other than her telephone or e-mail, and she is now a professor at a local college where she teaches Religious Studiesâwhere her curriculum contains no form of mysticism whatsoever. |