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House on The Edge by Darlene Foster

The old house on the edge of the farm has been empty for many years. Some say it is haunted; others say it is cursed. The wooden door is locked. Keeping its stories inside.

***

When city folk Jim and Alice bought the farm, they fixed up the cabin for their hired help to live in. They placed an ad in the local paper seeking someone who enjoyed working with horses. Gladys, a strong, buxom, mature woman was the first person to respond. They proudly showed her the spotless house with the smell of fresh paint and the glow of polished linoleum. Gladys took the job and moved in the next day with her seven cats. They enjoyed the run of the farm. The cats were not too popular with Alice, however, when they jumped up on the picnic table and ate the cream cheese dip she had put out for her croquet party guests. Gladys was warned to keep the cats in the cabin. She was good with the animals but had her own ideas about how to do things. After several disagreements with Jim, she packed her meagre belongings and left a note tacked to the barn door with a forwarding address to send her last cheque.

It appeared Gladys was unfamiliar with the concept of a litter box. Alice scrubbed the floors thoroughly and left the doors and windows open for days to get rid of the acrid smell of cat pee. She believed she could still smell it years later.

The next ad included “No pets allowed”. A university student with a love of horses became the next resident. She was young and eager and did a good job. Her light could be seen on late into the night, studying. Occasionally a young man spent the night. Jim and Alice didn’t mind. Better than cats! One day she told them she was moving into town with her boyfriend.

The house was much easier to clean up this time although there was candle wax on the floor. Alice shuddered at the thought of candles burning in a wooden building.

Against Alice’s advice, Jim hired a writer with a bushy beard. She just didn’t trust men with bushy beards. He slept until noon every day and only did the very basics of the job. Days went by without fresh food and water for the animals. He was soon asked to leave. They took two truckloads of empty wine and liquor bottles to the recycling store. Alice didn’t say anything but had that “I told you so” look on her face.

Two women in cowboy hats, big belt buckles and fancy boots seemed interesting enough to be hired. Jo and Jean had been in the rodeo circuit for a time and knew a lot about horses. They had great stories to tell and would sit around the picnic table with Jim and Alice sharing a cup of tea and reminiscing. One day Jo approached the house in tears; Jean had left in the middle of the night. Jo said she didn’t know how she could go on without the love of her life. Alice had never seen anyone so upset. She made her a cup of tea and tried to calm her down. Two days later Alice had to call the paramedics when Jo attempted suicide. Alice and Jim hired someone to clean up the blood.

A couple in their forties showed up with the job posting in hand. The meek wife made no eye contact and let her husband do all the talking. He seemed capable. Jim liked him.

Alice had a funny feeling and said, “She looks like a battered wife.”

Jim said,” You watch too much Oprah.”

Things went well. The chores got done and the couple kept to themselves. Jim decided this was the best they had ever had. Perhaps Alice should admit she was wrong.

One peaceful, sunny day while washing the dishes, Alice looked out the kitchen window and thought she saw someone hiding behind the big apple tree. Sure enough, it was a man – with a gun. Alice tensed. There was another man behind the car shed who put a megaphone to his mouth.

“This is the police, come out with your hands raised and no one will get hurt.”

The husband emerged from behind the barn and ran toward his truck. Both police officers were on him in an instant. Alice never imagined she would witness an arrest in her backyard.

The police officers explained they had had an anonymous call to the farm. The husband was known to them and had two previous charges of assault. After they took him away, Alice knocked on the door to the cabin. When no one answered she opened the door and went inside. The wife sat on the couch sobbing, while holding her head and rocking back and forth. Alice offered to call an ambulance but the woman insisted she was all right and that her sister would be there soon to pick her up. Alice couldn’t stop shaking for days.

A cast of thousands paraded in and out of that old house over the years.

Eventually, Jim and Alice agreed to sell up and retire. Except for a few items left behind, the building has stood empty ever since.

***

A chipped bookcase leans against one wall holding up dusty paperbacks, left by someone who could not bear to throw out a book. A beaten-up trunk remains in a dark corner, one item too many to be allowed on the next journey. A moth-eaten blanket, an assortment of old newspapers and a cowboy belt wait in vain. A rusty wrought iron headboard covered in spider webs holds secrets of amorous nights and lonely days, extreme happiness and deep sorrow. A poster of Edward Munch’s “The Scream” hangs on a wall where it surveys the scene with wide-eyed wonder, and silently shrieks.

On windy, rainy nights, some say you can hear sobbing. Others say they hear a hideous laugh. Children say the house is haunted. But don’t children always say that?

This story is my entry in the https://nofacilities.com/thursday-doors-writing-challenge-2023/

There is still time to enter.

Copyright ©2023 darlenefoster.wordpress.com – All rights reserved.

Welcome to Thursday Doors! This is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join us, simply create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week and then share a link to your post in the comments, anytime between 12:01 am Thursday morning and Saturday noon (North American eastern time). The link to join is here.

I spent a week in Taos, New Mexico a few years ago and found many unique doors. I decided to share a few of them for Dan Antion’s Thursday Doors this week.

A wooden carved door found in an artist’s house.

A door in the Hotel La Fonda leading into the DH Lawrence painting display

A door to a cantina.

The front door to the San Francisco de Asis church

The door to a hall on the church grounds.

An interesting shaped door in Mable Dodge Luhan’s house.

A door to a building on the grounds of Mable Dodge Luhan’s property

I loved the blue doors of the Taos Pueblo

Some of these doors made it into Amanda in New Mexico: Ghosts in the Wind. New Mexico is a fascinating state and I’m so glad I was able to visit it.

Dan is also featuring The Thursday Doors Writing Challenge (TDWC). Visit this page – Pick a door that inspires you – Write something, anything – Post it to your blog – Leave a link to your post in a comment on the TDWC page. If you don’t feel like writing, visit the page and see the wonderful things that have been written. Should be fun!

Copyright ©2023 darlenefoster.wordpress.com – All rights reserved.

I am joining Dan Antion over at https://nofacilities.com/ where he runs a series called Thursday Doors.

Welcome to Thursday Doors! This is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join us, simply create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week and then share a link to your post in the comments below, anytime between 12:01 am Thursday morning and Saturday noon (North American Eastern time).

My last post featured some pictures of my trip to the United Arab Emirates that inspired my first published book, Amanda in Arabia: The Perfume Flask. I included a picture of a door, which made me think I should do a Thursday Doors post of some of the interesting doors I found on that trip. So here you are:

The door to the Museum of Ras Al Khaimah

An interesting door inside the museum walls

The door of a deserted house found in an abandoned village

The door of the oldest mosque in the UAE, from 1410!

Ancient stone huts found in the mountains

A colourful door on a walled residence in the desert.

A door to a courtyard

At the Sharjah Sook

Some of these doors found their way into the book!

Copyright ©2023 darlenefoster.wordpress.com – All rights reserved.

I am joining Dan Antion over at https://nofacilities.com/ where he runs a series called Thursday Doors. This is what he has to say:

Welcome to Thursday Doors! This is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join us, simply create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week and then share a link to your post in the comments below, anytime between 12:01 am Thursday morning and Saturday noon (North American eastern time).

Check out Dan’s great books:  https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BC23MDLV 

I’m featuring some doors I found on the Isle of Arran, Scotland.

Brodick Castle

The front door of Brodick Castle

Back entrance to the castle

Farmhouse on the island.

St. Columba’s Church, now a dwelling

Isle of Arran Heritage Museum

Nineteenth Century Cottage

Buildings of the museum

One of many coffee shops and bakeries on the island.

Beautiful homes on Arran Island

There is so much to see and do on this wonderful island. I will share more about the museum in the next post.

Copyright ©2023 darlenefoster.wordpress.com – All rights reserved.

I am joining Dan Antion over at https://nofacilities.com/ where he runs a series called Thursday Doors. This is what he has to say:

Welcome to Thursday Doors! This is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join us, simply create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week and then share a link to your post in the comments below, anytime between 12:01 am Thursday morning and Saturday noon (North American eastern time).

Dan writes great books too  https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BC23MDLV 

Today I want to share some of the amazing doors I found in Malta. Most of the buildings in Malta are made from limeston, but the doors are often in bright colours breaking up the monotone buildings. I was fascinated by the variety of doors and doorknockers. Here are just a few pictures I took around the island.

You might recall that Amanda had quite the adventure in Malta.

Copyright ©2023 darlenefoster.wordpress.com – All rights reserved.

I am joining Dan Antion over at https://nofacilities.com/ where he runs a series called Thursday Doors. This is what he has to say:

Welcome to Thursday Doors! This is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join us, simply create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week and then share a link to your post in the comments below, anytime between 12:01 am Thursday morning and Saturday noon (North American eastern time).

Dan writes some great books too  https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BC23MDLV 

The doors I’m featuring today I discovered in Orihuela, an ancient inland city not far from where we live in Spain. There has been a city on the site since the fifth century and the buildings are an interesting mix of Arabic and European architecture.

I love this door on what appears to be a private residence, but it may have been a mosque at one time.

The main door to Santiago Parish Church; one of the many churches in Orihuela.

The fabulous entrance to Salvador and Santa Maria Cathedral, built on the site of a former mosque This entrance is called Door of the Chains

Another entrance to the cathedral.

Doors to the Town Hall or el Ayuntamiento, in Spanish

Doors to apartments in Orihuela

Door to the Santo Domingo Diocese College where I was given a guided tour by a couple of students.

Doors leading to the courtyard of the college

The gorgeous courtyard of the college

Hope you enjoyed this assortment of doors!

I am joining Dan Antion over at https://nofacilities.com/ where he runs a series called Thursday Doors. This is what he has to say:

Welcome to Thursday Doors! This is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join us, simply create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week and then share a link to your post in the comments below, anytime between 12:01 am Thursday morning and Saturday noon (North American eastern time).

Cathedrals often have amazing doors and I have discovered some here in Spain I wish to share. These doors are part of the Cathedral Church of Saint Mary in Murcia.

The facade is Baroque. Building was started in 1385 and completed in 1467 with additions added up to the 18th Century.

Some of the interesting details.

The bell tower, built between 1521 and 1791, stands 90 metres (300 ft) tall—95 metres (312 ft) with the weathervane. It is the tallest campanile in Spain. 

The city of Murcia is only about forty minutes away from where we live but I only just recently spent time in this amazing cathedral. I will follow up with some photos of the interior soon.

Copyright ©2023 darlenefoster.wordpress.com – All rights reserved.

I have always been fascinated by doors. Is it the mystery of what lies behind them or the curiosity of who has entered them in the past? Wherever I travel I tend to take pictures of doors. The older the better.

Dan Antion over at https://nofacilities.com/ runs a series called Thursday Doors. This is what he has to say:

Welcome to Thursday Doors! This is a weekly challenge for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join us, simply create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week and then share a link to your post in the comments below, anytime between 12:01 am Thursday morning and Saturday noon (North American eastern time).

Dan also writes some wonderful books https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0BC23MDLV you might want to check out.

I decided to join this challenge and share some of the door pictures I’ve collected over the years. I’ll start today with some doors I’ve discovered while exploring a place near us here in Spain. Let me know what you think of them.

I captured these doors in an amazing place called Guadelest. Oh, the stories these doors could tell if they could talk!

So many stories this door could tell.

Guadelest Castle. Some doors are harder to reach than others.

I’m going to enjoy sharing my door pictures.

Copyright ©2023 darlenefoster.wordpress.com – All rights reserved.


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