11
The drive back to
Neve Emek went uneventful, at least for the most part. I spent about an hour at
the bus stop, at which point the sun had already dipped below the horizon,
painting the sky in the beautiful shades of twilight. So far, so good, right? I
wished that would’ve been the case. But no. Wherever my eyes settled, strange
things happened around me, as though I was being followed by a bloody curse or
something.
This time, about halfway through the drive, we
passed that dilapidated hut again. But only once. I started counting the moment
we went by it, so I was pretty sure whatever happened last time wasn’t going to
happen again. Still, seeing it put me on edge, and the image of that grotesque
form too took space in my already distraught mind. One thing was sure, though.
The hut was real, not something my brain came up with.
As these dire insights raced in my head in a
never-ending loop, another thought crossed my mind and gave me goosebumps. Who
was that guy, anyway? The caretaker or whatever he was. The solicitor clearly
didn’t know him or have any knowledge of his existence. Bothered in ways no
words could truly capture, I fetched up the legal document she gave me and
skimmed through it until my eyes landed on that word again: caretaker. But if I
were the caretaker, then who the fuck was that guy—
“Shit!”
I lurched forwards, the paperwork slipping
from my grasp as the bus screeched to a stop. Crouching into the aisle to
gather the scattered sheets, I froze when a child’s chuckle reached my ears and
pulled me out of whatever demons were occupying my mind. I then followed the
source of the noise across the aisle without being aware of it. There, near the
driver’s seat, the porcelain doll sat with its arms folded over one another. It
wore that grotesque smile too, the one that kept widening and morphing into a
rictus. But it wasn’t the humanlike antics that arrested me or made me hold my
breath. Its white gown was drenched in blooming crimson liquid, sprayed and
splattered all over in broken patches.
The aisle stretched, impossibly so, as though the space itself had been
pulled tight, long, and narrow. Even the overhead lights buzzed in an eerie
beat, washing over the seats in dark hues that shifted with every damn flicker,
shadows blurring at the edges and crawling and lengthening – until it felt as
though the bus had no end at all. And yet, with every blink, the doll drew
closer and moved down the aisle before I could catch it.
I tried to move to no avail, and in those harrowing moments, its blank
eyes stared straight into mine like it had a soul of its own and was reading
mine.
I gulped hard.
Each time my eyes closed, even for the briefest of seconds, the distance between
us shortened further, and the doll… only drew closer.
And—closer.
I shut my eyes one final time.
Stopped breathing altogether now.
Then… silence. Just silence and nothing else.
When I dared to open my eyes again, the aisle looked normal. Too normal.
I heaved a deep sigh and relaxed my shoulders, letting my head fall back
onto the seat. But each inhale was laboured, and the little relief I felt did
nothing to soothe my galloping heart, while beads of cold sweat rolled down
into the worn fabric. It took me a moment to calm down completely, at which
point I gathered the papers against my chest, still panting like I had been
running, before rising and turning around. But as I did that, something else
unaccounted for happened. The lights flickered once and then—darkness.
I saw nothing but the murk, heard nothing but the sound of my own frantic
heartbeat. That is, until then. That chuckle… It was so close now that I—
A rush of hot breath grazed my ear, whispering something low and hushed.
Intelligible. I thought.
The flickering lights turned on and off. Repeatedly.
When my eyes adjusted to the flickering, I noticed that the doll was back
on the aisle, this time closer to my row of seats. Its porcelain mouth had stretched
wide in a blood-curdling grin, moving, whispering. What was it saying? Then the
words made sense, slowly and steadily, the broken chant transforming into words
I recognised. There it was again, that word etched onto the stone at Neve Emek.
Kāfir. But this word meant nothing to me. Nothing at all. But it meant
something, did it not? And it seemed someone – or something – wanted me to
figure out the true meaning of that word. But where to start? Where to go? The
word itself hadn’t even been directed at me, that much I knew. Sure, I had no
faith to talk about as an agnostic, but the word “kāfir” went deeper than the English equivalent word “heathen”.
I never rejected the Qur’an,
nor did I ever possess the knowledge to do so. But someone else must’ve. Or perhaps another… entity.
You read that right. Another entity.
The doll, the girl at the airport, every strange thing that had followed me
like a second skin since the arrival of that darn letter – they all
pointed to the same conclusion. Something otherworldly was reaching for me. Trying
to reach me. I didn’t know its purpose, not yet, and couldn’t speculate. But I
was convinced nonetheless: none of this was a coincidence or the way of fate. I
either had to succumb to my beliefs and face it head-on or throw in the towel
and leave this place before I lost my mind. I chose the former. I wanted
to choose the former, and so I did.
Neve Emek was as desolate as the night I first arrived here.
The sun had fully given way to the gloom when I disembarked and started
for the burial ground, but not a single soul was in sight. Still, their
watchful eyes followed me from behind the boarded-up windows and drawn curtains
billowing subtly to the cadence of the whistling wind making its entrance and
chilling everything in its path. While somewhat hostile and just as on high
alert as I was, something told me that these people meant no harm. I was an
outsider after all, and perhaps they too sensed the curse clinging and feared
what it might become. I knew I would if I were in their shoes.
I knocked on the caretaker’s door only once. Not sure why I did that
after what happened the last time. Maybe the mystery of his identity
overshadowed the fright that grew in the pit of my stomach? Honestly, more than
anything, I just wanted answers and a name I could relay back to the
solicitor. Anything, really. I needed to know more about him, this place too,
before my unsound mind completely took over and made a fool of me. So, why the
fuck wasn’t he answering the damn door!?
I was inches from striking the door a second time when it creaked open. The
unexpected movement sent a jolt through me; I reeled back, the image of the
hybrid creature flooding my mind and disturbing me to the core. Through the
slender gap, however, I made out the outlines of a cramped hall that emptied
into a doorless room. Everything beyond was swallowed in darkness. I saw no
creature – nor the caretaker, for that matter.
“…Hello?”
I pressed my palm to the door and
eased it wider before it slammed shut, letting my airy voice drift into the
darkness. There was no answer. No movement, no breath, or sign of anyone at
all. I didn’t even know the caretaker’s name, but I kept calling anyway,
imagining him asleep somewhere just out of sight.
“Hi, uh, it’s me, again. Sami.
Mind if I… come in?”
When I entered the hut, just one foot in, all sounds drowned out like I had
passed a threshold into the past or a portal into another time. Almost like I
was slowly descending underwater, the sound morphing and bending unnaturally. Even
the floorboards beneath me groaned in ways I lacked the proper vocabulary to
describe; all I knew was that each step caused my heart to pound louder.
At the entryway stood a foyer
table, antique and worn by the passage of time. On it was a framed photograph
of the caretaker and what looked like his son, taken perhaps some ten years
ago. What immediately arrested me was the smile. They wore the same smile. Too
wide, too large… just off, in other words. Maybe something between a scream
caught too short and a grin? Like the one that doll had?
I set the frame aside and let my
attention drift to the half-open drawer. Inside lay a sheet of yellowed paper
with old coffee stains. When I lifted it, the underside revealed a row of
printed digits. Some kind of code? The second drawer resisted me entirely. I
hooked my fingers under the edge and pulled, feeling the wood tremble but
refuse. I tried again, harder this time, the faint scrape of swollen timber
breaking the silence. Still nothing. Eventually, I let go and breathed out into
the stale air, unsettled by how stubbornly it remained shut – just like the
wardrobe in the guestroom.
The hall split into two directions, but only one led to an unlocked space,
which I assumed had to be the living room, though it was probably used as a
bedroom since a collapsed sofa had been folded out into a bed. The sheets were
completely unmade, as if someone had left in a hurry or thrashed through the
night. Across from it, a canapé sagged under its own weight, the upholstery
torn open as though something sharp had stabbed straight through the fabric.
Against the wall, on the floor, stood what I first mistook for a tall,
oval mirror draped with a sheet. I pulled the cloth away and laid it on the
sofa, only to find the glass beneath broken into pieces from a brutal impact at
the centre with thin fissures going outwards into the surface. Even the
oriental rug was completely ruined; its colours were faded under layers of
dark, stiff stains. Brown spots all over. The stains reminded me of those back
in the guestroom. Had someone died here? That would surely explain these stains.
But something did not add up. From the look of it, these stains were not only several
years old but also a copious amount. And I don’t mean copious as in “someone
had a heart attack and banged his head on something”, but more in the sense of “someone
got murdered and was dismembered here.” No other plausible explanation could
account for—
The front door slammed shut.
I rose from where I had crouched and whipped around.
But no one came. No footsteps reached my ear.
Instead, something else tugged at my attention as I let my eyes snap to
the hallway. Another door. For a moment I stood there, feeling the locked door’s
pull, as though whatever lay behind it expected me… or had been waiting for me all
along. I frowned. Wait a second. Had it really always been there? Perhaps
the darkness altered my perception? Who knew?
I stepped towards the door, drawn
against my will. The air grew colder with each step, carrying a faint, stale
scent that made my stomach twist. My hand hovered over the knob. It was
ice-cold to the touch, far colder than the rest of the hut had been. A shiver
ran down my spine as I tightened my grip.
Then twisted it. Thank goodness,
it was locked.
I pressed my ear to the wood, not
sure why. Was the caretaker inside the room? I wasn’t sure… and I couldn’t hear
a damn thing, either. But no matter how long I listened or waited in front of
the door, nothing out of the ordinary let itself be known to me. Still, the
pull of the door didn’t fade. Why was it locked? My fingers itched to try the doorknob
again, to see if persistence could pierce whatever barrier lay behind it. I
couldn’t explain it – not then, not now – but something about the door intrigued
me. I knew half of my questions would be answered if I managed to pry it open, but
at the same time, I feared it. What if the truth I sought was ugly? What if I
regretted knowing the truth when ignorance was bliss?
Right then—
The front door swung open.
My eyes snapped down the hall,
towards the living room, searching for cover. The sofa sagged too low, the rug
offered nothing, and the curtains were flimsy at best. Then I spotted the
canapé just far enough away from the wall to slip behind. Without thinking, I
went for it, pressing my back against the hard surface, getting as close to the
ground as was physically possible for
someone of my build.
The footsteps grew heavier
instantly, faster, reverberating over the thin floorboards. My heart slammed in
my chest, threatening to rip through my skin. I waited for a few seconds
without moving, barely breathing, then slid along the wall until I could peer
into the living room, flattening myself
further into the shadows, straining not to cough, not to breathe too loud. From
this angle, however, I could only see the bottom of the entryway where the
footsteps had come from.
I had never once been this scared in my adult life. Ever. It brought me
back to my childhood, to the days were I feared the darkness that swept over my
bedroom with the nightfall. But this kind of fear was different – more real. I
could die. A single misstep, a breath too loud, and I could die, and no one
would ever know.
Shit!
A pair of legs entered my view.
Boots. Mud had crusted at the edges and stained the leather as if they
had trudged through wet soil. Coming closer. Into the open space. But I was too
low to see further than the abdomen. It had to be a guy; I would have known if
it were a woman by the way he flexed his calf muscles beneath his trousers.
The man stopped abruptly in the middle of the rug, breathing heavily, shifting
his weight slightly as it seemed to me he was looking around the place. Was he
looking for me? But how did he know I was here? But these thoughts soon faded
and gave way to other kinds of thoughts – morbid thoughts – as my eyes drifted
to the broken mirror on the floor and caught a glimpse of the stranger’s face. This
wasn’t the caretaker but someone younger, more muscular, at the same time…
eerily similar. The facial muscles, the way the brows were set low and—
I frowned as the framed photograph of the caretaker and his son, whom
I assumed was his son, popped into my head. Could it really be? But why was this
guy here? The caretaker didn’t say a word about having a son, not that he had
to, but a brief heads-up would’ve been appreciated. The burial ground was,
albeit not yet legally, my property! No one just went in and out without permission.
To think I actually spent the entire night with those odd people…!
Despite everything going on around me, inside me, I tried my best to stay
calm and not take hasty decisions. Whoever this guy was, it was now clear to me
that he was waiting for me to make a mistake and give myself away. I was not
about to make his day, trust me. Afraid? I sure as hell were. Suicidal? Right-fucking-now?
Think not—
The boots shifted abruptly, turning my way.
I covered my mouth, frantically trying to calm my nerves and stop myself
from making a sound and fleeing like a coward. But doing so was harder than it
seemed. It was in the human instinct to either fight or flee in such situations,
and I was no exception. Even so, I knew that the moment I moved, whoever was
inching closer would catch me in the act. There was no escape in this room, no
window that was not boarded up, and the only exit route was out of reach. My
chances of survival, however slim, were higher behind the canapé.
For a heartbeat, I thought the figure would crouch, thought the next
second would be the appearance of a hand along the canapé. But something else
happened instead. The person, or whatever this was, retreated and crossed back
towards the hallway. Seconds later, the front door groaned, and the lock turned
with a click, followed by the sound of heavy footsteps fading into the night.
Relief washed over me as I let out the breath I’d been holding the whole
time, gasping for air. My chest rose and fell in a frantic beat, nevertheless.
It took me a while to gather my thoughts and leave my hiding spot. But
then something else caught my attention, something that hadn’t been there
before. Near the rug, catching the moonlight, glinting. My eyes narrowed. An
old key. It lay on its side, and the bow was wrought into filigree. The shaft
was thick and squared, the teeth blunt and heavy. From the ring hung a single
stamped plate: Room 102. Was this the key to that room in the gap in the wall?
My hand reached for it before my head caught up. As my fingers brushed
the cold metal, I realised that it was heavier than it looked and left a faint,
oily print on my skin. For a long moment, I simply held it and listened to the hut
exhale as if it too were reacting to the strange events leading to this very
moment.
What now? The caretaker said the building was basically a maze and that I
would probably get lost if I went somewhere I wasn’t supposed to. But now that
I was certain I had been brought here for a reason, I couldn’t ignore the voice
in my head telling me to get to the bottom of whatever secret the burial ground
guarded over – as well as that caretaker and the young guy that looked like
him.
I still had three days to decide,
but that same night I messaged the solicitor and said I wanted to sign the
papers as soon as possible. If I was ever going to explore this place, truly
explore it, navigate its maze and understand what hid beneath it, I needed more
time. The six months required suddenly felt like the exact span this strange
task demanded of me.
I knew I was playing with fire,
that something hunted the burial ground. But instead of driving me away, it piqued
my curiosity. I’d always wanted to write a book, and this place – this
impossible situation I now found myself in – felt like the kind of premise that
would hook any reader.
Or maybe I was walking straight into
something I wouldn’t survive.
I suppose only time would tell. And it certainly did.