A Chambered Nautilus
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About this ebook
Nita walked away from her family when she was seventeen years old, determined to never look back. But forty years later, when her mother died and her father descended into Alzheimer's, Nita returned to New Orleans to care for him in his final months.
Now her father has passed on, leaving to Nita her childhood home as an inheritance. But she soon finds she isn't the only resident. The house is occupied by ghosts of her past, playing out scenes of the life she fled.
What are they trying to tell her? Will they ever leave her in peace? And are they really spirits, or only visions, emerging from sealed-off depths of memory as from the shell of a chambered nautilus?
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Anne L. Watson, a retired historic preservation architecture consultant, is the author of several novels, plus books on such diverse subjects as soapmaking and baking with cookie molds. A former resident of New Orleans -- the setting of "A Chambered Nautilus" -- she currently lives in Bellingham, Washington.
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SAMPLE
At the restaurant, we found a corner table a little away from other patrons. When we'd ordered, Enid sipped her ice water. "Tell me more," she said.
"I've been seeing ghosts in the house," I said. "Or maybe they're not ghosts. A friend of mine calls them visions."
A bad start. I tried again.
"I think I told you I'd been a caregiver for my father? Well, he was living in the house I grew up in, and now it's mine. But I keep seeing him -- and my mom, and my sister and brother, and me -- all over the house."
"Really? What are these visions about?"
"Scenes from the past. I suppose it sounds crazy."
"Not at all. You said your dad passed away recently? What about your mom?"
"She died a few years ago. Suddenly. That's when we found out Dad had Alzheimer's."
"So you were his caregiver after that. Are your brother and sister still living?"
"Yes. I'm closer to my sis than to my brother."
"My guess is the 'ghosts' are leftover emotional energy from intense experiences in the house. I gather they're not doing everyday tasks like peeling apples and mopping floors."
"Mostly not. But even the everyday, normal things they do feel intense."
She nodded. "I can see why. What else did your friend say? The one who called them visions."
"That it was a form of teaching. That they'd go away once I learned what I needed to."
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A Chambered Nautilus - Anne L. Watson
A CHAMBERED NAUTILUS
Anne L. Watson
Shepard & Piper
Friday Harbor, Washington
2014
Copyright © 2014 by Anne L. Watson
Ebook Version 1.4
Anne L. Watson, a retired historic preservation architecture consultant, is the author of several novels, plus books on such diverse subjects as soapmaking and baking with cookie molds. A former resident of New Orleans — the setting of A Chambered Nautilus — she currently lives in Friday Harbor, Washington, in the San Juan Islands, with her husband and fellow author, Aaron Shepard, and their cat, Skeeter.
Novels
Skeeter: A Cat Tale ~ Pacific Avenue ~ Joy ~ Flight ~ Cassie’s Castaways ~ Willow’s Crystal ~ Benecia’s Mirror ~ A Chambered Nautilus ~ Departure
Lifestyle
Living Apart Together
For more about Anne and
her books, please visit
www.annelwatson.com
1
The good part about inheriting my father’s house in the suburbs of New Orleans, along with most of his money, was that I wouldn’t have to rent anymore. Or go back to work. Being able to retire comfortably at the age of 58 was like winning the lottery.
The drawbacks were less obvious, but they showed up as time went by.
The first was predictable: Amanda and Louis, my older sister and younger brother, received only minor sums of money and a few keepsakes. They weren’t silent about it, either.
Manda phoned shortly after she read her letter from Dad’s lawyer. "Well, Nita, how’d you pull that off?" she asked. She didn’t sound angry, more like she was asking for tips, in case she had a chance at a similar sly coup.
I didn’t pull anything off.
He hadn’t been competent for the last couple of years.
Oh? You knew?
I said, You’ll have to talk to a lawyer if you want to contest the will.
Not me. I have better things to do.
You do have two houses of your own, Manda. A summer one and a winter one, like dresses. Maybe he thought you didn’t need a third.
If you’d gone to college, maybe you wouldn’t be so needy.
There was that little matter of tuition.
If you’d had the slightest idea what you wanted to do, maybe Dad would have paid for your college.
I drew a deep breath. Thought about trying to make her laugh. If you hadn’t hidden my Raggedy Ann in the garage when I was four, maybe I would have . . .
No, it would probably misfire. Manda, we can either quarrel over Dad’s will or not. I’d rather not. The will was dated long before Alzheimer’s took over his brain, and I don’t think it was unfair, under the circumstances. I’d much, much rather be friends than enemies.
She was silent for a long few seconds. Okay,
she finally said. Friends.
I hoped she meant it. We hadn’t seen each other often, but she was the only one of the family who hadn’t become a stranger. It’s hard to lose the last one.
Friends,
I echoed.
When Lou called, he was even more direct. Right off, he asked, Are you going to sell the house?
Hi, Lou,
I said. How are you? Haven’t seen you in ages.
Like, haven’t seen you helping with Dad’s diapers for the past two years. Or even at the funeral. Possibly you were invisible, but I think you weren’t here.
Fine. I’m fine. Are you going to sell the house? Because if you do, you should split the money with Manda and me. Dad didn’t know what he was doing at the end, as I’m sure you were well aware.
I’m not selling it,
I said. I’m going to stay here. And before you say any more, check the date on your copy of the will. It was signed and witnessed at his lawyer’s office long before his mind went. In fact, he did it while I was still in California.
He hung up on me.
Well, he’d get over it. Or, of course, maybe not.
The second drawback was that the house was haunted. Not by traditional misty, wailing ghosts. That might have been intriguing. No, it was haunted by the lives we’d lived there.
The first ghost — or whatever it was — appeared in the kitchen the morning after Dad’s funeral.
A woman sprawls on the floor. Her hair hasn’t been combed yet this morning, and her robe is hiked up around her thighs. Her head is turned so that her face isn’t visible. A pan on the stove smokes dangerously.
I hadn’t seen that when it happened. I’d imagined it when Dad called to tell me about Mom.
Your mother died,
he said.
My heart started pounding as if I’d run for a long time. What happened?
I said.
I don’t know. She was making pancakes.
And?
God, he was hard to talk to. At that point, I didn’t know why.
I smelled something burning.
Another full stop.
And?
They said it was a heart attack.
No.
That was all I could think to say. My mind went in a dozen directions. Images popped up in no particular order, some contradicting others. I imagined him frantically trying to revive her while the smoke alarm screamed. Or calmly leaning over her body to turn the burner off. Opening a window to let the smoke out. Calling 911. Pouring the pancake batter down the kitchen sink. Following the ambulance to the nearest hospital. Talking to paramedics, maybe police. I didn’t ask for details. I didn’t want to know.
What can I do?
I asked.
Nothing,
he said.
Do you need help?
No.
But he did. He had no idea how much help he needed. Mom had hidden his illness from us, maybe for years. It wouldn’t have been hard to do. We weren’t close, and he wasn’t that bad yet. But when she was gone, there was no hiding anymore.
In the week after Dad’s funeral, Mom’s ghost was always there on the kitchen floor. After a while, she was still in the kitchen, but not dead anymore. Sometimes, she was happily making a birthday cake or a batch of her wonderful fudge. Washing fresh spinach at the sink. Making a pie from blackberries we’d picked. Singing, if you could call it that — she’d been tone-deaf. But her voice was music to her, and that’s all that counted there in the kitchen.
Two little girls beg for tastes of frosting from the mixer beaters.
Wait,
their mother says. You’ll ruin your appetite for dinner. Wait and have the frosting on the cake.
It’s not as good on the cake,
says Manda.
Their mother is surprised, even annoyed.
It’s the same frosting, and you’ll have the cake, too. What do you mean, it’s not as good?
Please, Mom? It’s better when you just made it.
She gives them each a beater from the electric mixer. Not much frosting on either one, but exactly equal.
The girls