The car wobbles, rumbling over rough gravel as it leaves the highway for the
grove. How Court had seen anything hidden within, you couldn’t guess. The
trees consume all, blocking even the omnipresent roar of traffic. A strange
pocket of quiet that only grows deeper as the house looms into view.
You’re the first to step out of the car and stare up at the derelict building.
Two storeys, a main floor of dirty cream stucco, and wood panels weathered a
dark brown covering the upper gable. Most of the windows are broken, yellowed
lace curtains billowing out through jagged shards. They sway, calm and gentle,
as though the entire house were nestled at the bottom of a grand aquarium,
slowly dissolving in the current.
Jessie’s camera clicks, loud enough to make you jump.
“This place might have been cute back in the 70s,” Court says, heading for the
door. You follow close behind while Matt and Jessie linger by the car, laughing
over a joke you hadn’t understood.
Court looks back at you with a grin, “Lucky. We won’t have to break in.”
The front door sits crooked against its warped frame, tapping a slow rhythm on
the wood. With each open swing, you glimpse a waist high sapling sprouting up
between the house and its crumbling front step, leaves rustling a quiet
welcome.
grove. How Court had seen anything hidden within, you couldn’t guess. The
trees consume all, blocking even the omnipresent roar of traffic. A strange
pocket of quiet that only grows deeper as the house looms into view.
You’re the first to step out of the car and stare up at the derelict building.
Two storeys, a main floor of dirty cream stucco, and wood panels weathered a
dark brown covering the upper gable. Most of the windows are broken, yellowed
lace curtains billowing out through jagged shards. They sway, calm and gentle,
as though the entire house were nestled at the bottom of a grand aquarium,
slowly dissolving in the current.
Jessie’s camera clicks, loud enough to make you jump.
“This place might have been cute back in the 70s,” Court says, heading for the
door. You follow close behind while Matt and Jessie linger by the car, laughing
over a joke you hadn’t understood.
Court looks back at you with a grin, “Lucky. We won’t have to break in.”
The front door sits crooked against its warped frame, tapping a slow rhythm on
the wood. With each open swing, you glimpse a waist high sapling sprouting up
between the house and its crumbling front step, leaves rustling a quiet
welcome.
Once Recalled by Sarah Clarke, page 2