
|
In 1975 we, Mum, Dad, and three of us girls, moved
into the ground floor and basement apartment of a
tenament building in Glasgow,Scotland. From the
start, we girls (Mum doesn't have a sensitive bone
in her body) found it difficult to enter into the
front, main bedroom. This room appeared to be
always cold, and nothing seemed to heat it
properly. Our German Shepard, Candy, wouldn't
enter the room unless we dragged her in there.
When we walked through the entrance foyer on the
ground floor level, sometimes we'd feel as though
we walked through a pocket of cold, still air, and
on on those occasions Candy would appear
unsettled, pacing the foyer, sniffing the air.
This was all that we felt for about two months,
then things started to pick up the pace.
I remember the first night I got really, really,
scared, as opposed to feeling uneasy. We were all
sitting in the lounge, with the door shut to keep
the heat in, watching TV, when Candy leapt up,
from a deep sleep, growling, hackles fully raised,
and stalked over to the door. Our first
collective thought was that we had an intruder in
the house, so Dad opened the door for Candy. She
took a flying leap into the foyer, still growling
and carrying on, and proceeded to watch something,
which we couldn't see, move from the front bedroom
across the foyer, and around the corner to the
area containing the kitchen, bathroom, and stairs
leading down to the basement area. Dad tried to
step in front of Candy, to see if anyone was
hiding around the corner, but she turned on him,
forcing him, and the rest of us, back into the
lounge. One doesn't argue with a 45 kg dog
behaving like that. I must add that Candy was
named because of her sweet nature, and had never
shown that she was capable of being so enraged
before.
After about ten minutes Candy settled down, and
Dad went through the house checking that things
were as they should be. They were, but that
didn't stop Candy repeating the performance on a
regular basis - terrifying if one was in the house
alone.
No one in the family saw or heard anything at all,
just the feelings we experienced, which were
enough, thank you. Right up until the day we left
the house our younger sister, then aged 14, could
not be convinced to walk through the foyer alone,
and I must admit that whenever I'd move through
the foyer I'd ensure that Candy was close at hand.
My elder sister used to feel a presence passing
her on the steps leading to the basement, as did
my younger sister, my I never experienced that at
all. Dad thought once that he felt a "shove" to
his back while standing, talking at the top of the
stairs, but he, to this day, doesn't like talking
about the house.
|
Submitted From: Queensland, Australia
{Back to October/Halloween 1999 stories}
{Back to the Storypage}