The Saturday Night Ghost Club
Page 1
Other books by Craig Davidson
RUST AND BONE (stories)
A savage world populated by fighting dogs, prizefighters, sex addicts, and gamblers. “Smudges the line between comedy and horror, cruelty and mercy. His remarkable stories are challenging and upsetting, but never boring.” —Chuck Palahniuk, author of Fight Club
THE FIGHTER (a novel)
Set in the violent world of illegal bare-knuckle boxing, The Fighter unflinchingly captures that world’s colourful denizens, its bleakness, its bracing and bloody violence. “The Fighter is an essential novel, destined for cult status at the very least.” —Irvine Welsh, author of Trainspotting and Filth
SARAH COURT (a novel)
Ask yourself: How well do you know your neighbours? How well do you know your own family? Ultimately, how well do you know yourself? How deeply do the threads of your own life entwine with those around you? Do you ever really know how tightly those threads are knotted?
CATARACT CITY (a novel)
Owen and Duncan both dream of escape from Cataract City, a longing made more urgent by a near-death incident in childhood. But in adulthood their paths diverge, and as Duncan, the less privileged, falls into the town’s underworld, he and Owen become reluctant adversaries at opposite ends of the law. Shortlisted for the Scotiabank Giller Prize.
PRECIOUS CARGO (memoir)
One morning in 2008, desperate and impoverished and living in a one-room basement apartment while trying unsuccessfully to write, Davidson plucked a flyer out of his mailbox that read, “Bus Drivers Wanted.” That was the first step towards an unlikely new career…“Craig Davidson’s new memoir reveals poignant truths about his year as a Calgary school-bus driver….a sweet and often funny story about [Davidson’s] bond with the five children on his route.” —Calgary Herald
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF CANADA
Copyright © 2018 Craig Davidson
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Published in 2018 by Alfred A. Knopf Canada, a division of Penguin Random House Canada Limited, Toronto. Distributed in Canada by Penguin Random House Canada Limited, Toronto.
www.penguinrandomhouse.ca
Knopf Canada and colophon are registered trademarks.
Grateful acknowledgment is made for permission to reproduce the following: “The brain is wider than the sky” by Emily Dickinson, from The Poems of Emily Dickinson, edited by Thomas H. Johnson, Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Copyright © 1951, 1955 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. Copyright © renewed 1979, 1983 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College. Copyright © 1914, 1918, 1919, 1924, 1929, 1930, 1932, 1935, 1937, 1942, by Martha Dickinson Bianchi. Copyright © 1952, 1957, 1958, 1963, 1965, by Mary L. Hampson. Reprinted by permission.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Davidson, Craig, 1976–, author
The Saturday night ghost club : a novel / Craig Davidson.
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 9780735274822
eBook ISBN 9780735274839
I. Title.
PS8607.A79S38 2018 C813’.6 C2018-900088-0
C2018-900089-9
Book design by Five Seventeen
Cover image: (abandoned house) © Ed Freeman / Stone Collection / Getty Images
v5.3.1
a
To Nicholas,
With all the love in my body.
The Brain–is wider than the Sky–
For–put them side by side–
The one the other will contain
With ease–and You beside–
The Brain is deeper than the sea–
For–hold them–Blue to Blue–
The one the other will absorb–
As Sponges–Buckets–do–
The Brain is just the weight of God–
For–Heft them–Pound for Pound–
And they will differ–if they do–
As Syllable from Sound–
—Emily Dickinson, 632
Memory is another word for story, and nothing is more unreliable.
—Ann-Marie MacDonald, Fall on Your Knees
Contents
Cover
Other books by Craig Davidson
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
1. Monsters
2. The Spirit Phone
3. The Screaming Tunnel
4. Sunken Wreck
5. The House on the Hill
6. Black Agnes
7. All Hallows’ Eve
Acknowledgements
About the Author
1.
MONSTERS
Most people believe the human brain is solid. They imagine a loaf of bread soaked in gelatin: you can hack off quivering slices, same as you would with a Jell-O mould at a family picnic. But the truth is, the brain’s texture is more like toothpaste. Brain matter will squeeze through a keyhole. In cases of severe cranial swelling, surgeons use a drill—I prefer the RA-II, a Korean model: 30,000rpm, with silicone hand-grips for comfort—to bore into the skull. If the swelling cannot be stopped, the living brain will project from the hole in an inverted funnel. This is called a “coning,” and it marks an end.
Most people also believe the brain is grey. Its cells are called grey matter, after all, and isn’t that how the organ looks in horror flicks: a slaty walnut floating in a jar of formaldehyde in some mad scientist’s lab? But a sheathed brain is bracingly pink. The tissue only turns grey once the cerebrospinal sac has been perforated, once the air hits it. When a brain cones, the tissue changes colour; traceries of ash thread through that bubble-gum pink as a million thoughts flicker and die.
People think neurosurgeons cut into brains with a scalpel. Another myth. How can you carve toothpaste? An infant’s brain matter is even less substantial than an adult’s, like pancake batter. I operate with a sucker wand, a tool that is exactly as it sounds. As I investigate the runnels of a patient’s brain, it grips me that something unforgivingly solid—my wand—is moving through something ephemeral, dreamlike: a patient’s memories. Though I work carefully and with a keen knowledge of the cerebral topography, my wand remains a beast blundering through fields of budding shoots. If I trample something critical, the patient may awaken lacking a vital memory. That one where they gazed into the sky as a child wondering how a star might taste, settling on breathtaking wintergreen. The smell of their newborn daughter’s scalp, or that haunting tingle on their lips following their first kiss.
I navigate the storerooms of a patient’s consciousness, passing memories in their golden vaults, my wand clumsily bayoneting—it often seems—the pink jelly that holds everything the patient is or will ever be. Hard as I try not to disturb the furniture, things happen. I am forced to accept these tragic outcomes, for the same reason that the patients on my table must accept their own lot: we are only human, a condition of perpetual uncertainty and failure.
The brain is the seat of memory, and memory is a tricky thing. At base level, memories are stories—and sometimes these stories we tell allow us to carry on. Sometimes stories are the best we can hope for. They help us to simply get by, while deeper levels of our consciousness slap bandages on wounds that hold the power to wreck us. So we tell ourselves that the people we love closed their eyes and slipped painlessly away from
us. That our personal failures are the product of external forces rather than unfixable weaknesses. That we were too damn good for the rat-assed bastards who jilted us, anyway. Tell yourself these stories long enough and you will discover they have a magical way of becoming facts.
But a secret can be hidden from everyone save its holder, and the brain is not only a storyteller, it is a truth-seeking organ. If the stories we tell are no more than an overlay, the equivalent of six feet of caliche covering a pool of toxic sludge, something’s bound to bubble up, right? And the most awful truths will do so in the darkest hours of night, when we’re most vulnerable.
If you bury those secrets so deep that you forget they ever happened, okay, maybe you’ve beat the devil. But the truth is a bloodhound. That’s something I can tell you with certainty. The truth is that abandoned dog following you over sea and land, baying from barren clifftops, never tiring and never quitting, forever pining after you—and the day will come when that dog is on your porch, scratching insistently at your door, forcing you to claim it once again.
i.
As a boy, I believed in monsters.
I was convinced that if I said “Bloody Mary” in front of a mirror, a hideous witch-woman would reach through the glass with nails sharp as splinters. I considered it a fact that the Devil lingered at shadowy crossroads and went to dance halls in disguise, where he’d ask the prettiest girl to dance and reel her across the floor while spectators stood terror-stricken at the sight of the Devil’s goatish shanks, until the girl fainted dead away and the Unclean One vanished in a puff of brimstone.
There was no falsehood I wouldn’t swallow, no quilt of lies you couldn’t drape over my all-too-gullible shoulders. But for a boy like me—chubby, freckled, awkward; growing up in a city where the erection of a new Kmart occasioned our mayor to announce, “This marks a wondrous new chapter in our town’s history”—imagination was my greatest asset. Not to mention my defence against a foe worse than the most fearsome monster: loneliness.
My ally against that foe was my uncle Calvin. If I told him there was a bottomless pit in my basement, he’d say, “Tell me, Jake, is the air denser around the mouth of the pit than in other areas of the basement?” Cocking an eyebrow: “Do ominous growling sounds emanate from this pit of yours?”
Uncle C was the ideal nursemaid for my paranoid fantasies. His knowledge of urban legends and folklore was encyclopedic—with the added bonus that he seemed to consider most of it true.
“Hey,” he’d say, “did you know there are crocodiles living in the sewers of our fair city? The poor suckers get smuggled up from Florida by dumb tourists. Sure, they’re cute as a bug’s ear when they’re six inches long. But when they grow up and get nippy? Ba-whooosh, down the porcelain mistake eraser. They get fat ’n’ sassy down there in the pipes, where there’s plenty to eat if you’re not choosy. Every year a couple of sanitation department workers get gobbled up by sewer crocs. The press bottles it up, unscrupulous snakes that they are, but it’s a fact you can set your watch to.”
Uncle C would fiddle with the beads of his bracelet—each an ornate pewter Cthulhu head, mouths and eye sockets sprouting tentacles—and offer a wistful sigh. “And that, Jake, is why owning a pet is a big responsibility.”
Once, when I was six or seven, I became convinced a monster lived in my closet. I told my dad, who did what 99 percent of adults do when their child makes this claim: he flung my closet door open, rattled coat hangers and shoved shoeboxes aside, making a Broadway production of it. “See? No monsters, Jake.”
But monsters make themselves scarce when adults are around, only to slither back after dark. Every kid knew this to be an unshakable fact.
Uncle C arrived for dinner that night, as usual—Mom invited him every Sunday. He got an inkling of my worry as I sat picking at my Salisbury steak.
“What’s the matter, hombre?”
“We have an unwanted visitor in a closet, apparently,” Mom informed him.
“But we’ve established that there’s no monster,” my father said. “Right, buddy?”
“Ah,” said Uncle C. “I have some expertise in this area. Sam, with your permission?”
Mom turned to my father and said, “Sam,” in the tone of voice you’d use to calm a jittery horse.
“Of course, Cal, as you like,” my father said.
My uncle pedalled home to his house, returning ten minutes later with a tool box. Once we were in my bedroom he motioned to the closet. “I take it this is its lair?”
I nodded.
“Closets are a favourite haunt of monsters,” my uncle explained. “Most are harmless, even good-tempered, if they have enough dust bunnies and cobwebs to eat. Do you clean your closet?”
I assured him that it was hardly ever tidied unless my mother forced the chore on me.
“Good, let them feast. If they get too hungry they’ll crawl over to your clothes hamper and eat holes in your underwear. No need to check the seat of your drawers for confirmation, as I can see by your expression that yours have indeed met this cruel fate.”
Calvin cracked the tool box and pulled out an instrument—one that today I’d recognize as a stud finder.
“It’s a monster tracer,” he said, running it over the closet walls, making exploratory taps with his knuckles. “There are token traces of ectoplasm,” he said in the voice of a veteran contractor. “Monster slime, in layman’s terms. What does this monster look like?”
“Hairy in some parts, slimy in others.”
“What’s its shape? Like a snake, or a blob?”
“A blob. But it can stretch, too, so it can look like a snake if it wants.”
“We’re dealing with a hairy, slimy blob with uncanny stretching capacities.” He gripped his chin. “Sounds like a Slurper Slug. They’re common around these parts.”
“A slug?”
“Correct, but we’re not talking your garden-variety slug.” He laughed—actually, he exclaimed ha-ha. “A little paranormal humour for you, Jake my boy. These peculiar and particularly gross slugs infest closets and crawl spaces. You haven’t been keeping anything tasty in your closet, have you?”
“That’s where I put my Halloween candy.”
“Slurper Slug, then, guaranteed. They’re not dangerous, just revolting. They could make a mortician barf his biscuits. If you let one hang around he’ll call his buddies and before long you’ve got an infestation on your hands.”
He rooted through his tool box for a pouch of fine red powder. “This is cochineal, made from the crushed shells of beetles. It’s used in containment spells.”
He laid down a line of powder in the shape of a keyhole:
“This,” he said, pointing to the circle, “is the trap. The Slurper Slug will traipse up this path, see, which gets narrower and narrower until the Slug gets stuck in the Circle of No Return. There it will turn black as night and hard as rock. Now, you’ll have to pull one hair out of your head to bait the slug trap.”
I plucked a single strand, which my uncle laid softly in the trap.
“Go ask your mom if she has any chocolate chips.”
I went down to the kitchen to find my folks engaged in a hushed conversation. My father’s shoulders were vibrating like twin tuning forks.
“Chocolate chips, huh?” Mom said in a Susie-Cheerleader voice. “I’ve only got butterscotch.”
By the time I got back, the closet was shut. My uncle instructed me to lay a trail of butterscotch chips along the door.
“The sweetness will draw that Slug out of hiding. Now listen, Jake, and listen carefully. If you peek inside the closet, the spell will be broken. Under no circumstances can it be opened until tomorrow morning. No matter the sounds you may hear dribbling through this door, you must leave it closed. Do you swear this to me?”
“Yes, I promise.”
“By the Oath of the White Mage, do you swear it?”
When I admitted I didn’t know that oath, he stuck out his little finger. “The pinkie vari
ety will suffice.”
I linked my finger with his and squeezed.
“Cross your heart and hope to die?”
“Stick a needle in my eye,” I said solemnly.
I awoke to sunlight streaming through the window. I crept to the closet and opened it. Just as Uncle C had said, the keyhole was now only a circle and in the middle sat an object that was dark as night and hard as rock.
My uncle was taking off his boots in the front hall when I stormed downstairs.
“The trap worked!” I told him, dragging him up the stairs to show him the blackened slug.
“Pick it up,” he said. “It may still be a little warm but it won’t burn you.”
Queasy warmth pulsed off the slug, or so it felt to me.
“It’s not every day that you can hold a monster in your palm, is it, Jake?”
That lump of obsidian would rest on my nightstand for years. Then one day I noticed it sitting between my Junior Sleuths magnifying glass and a dog-eared reissue of Stephen King’s Carrie, the one with the art deco cover. Opening the drawer, I swept the volcanic rock inside, embarrassed that I’d once been fear-struck by anything so infantile as a snot-ball slug in my closet….
An hour later I took it out and put it back where it belonged.
2.
THE SPIRIT PHONE
What follows is an account, as I choose to remember it, of my twelfth year on this planet—the summer of the Saturday Night Ghost Club. Uncle C called the inaugural meeting, and in addition to him, our membership roll was tiny: Billy Yellowbird, Lexington Galbraith and me. Later on Dove Yellowbird became the club’s lone female member.
The club convened in Niagara Falls. Cataract City, as we locals call it. A place stuck in time. The shop awnings are ’70s-era candy-stripes, and the row houses have tarpaper roofs. The rooms in every motel down the strip—flops with names like the Lovers’ Nest and the Honeydew Inn—smell of burnt dust and carpet powder, and the duvets look like somebody’s grandma’s sofa covers. Nothing ever gets torn down in Cataract City. Buildings collapse like woolly mammoths sucked lamenting into a tar pit, and afterwards, the spot where that dilapidated house or shop stood remains barren. In most towns, things change. Vacant lots become parking lots, or gentrification hits and they become tapas restaurants and dog grooming salons. But where I come from those weedy lots become part of the scenery. People would miss them if they were gone.