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AND THE BABY CRIED
It was the early 1970s. We lived in the Alberta city of
Edmonton with our two young children. My husband was an
unemployed laborer. We could no longer afford the rent on
our apartment, so I went house hunting.
I finally found an old house we could afford. Once white,
it had long stood vacant and now the paint was peeling. It
stood in a weed-choked yard behind a ragged chicken wire
fence. Not pretty, but it would be a roof over our heads
until circumstances changed.
We moved in a week later. Someone must have found a bargain
in paint, because the walls and the ceiling were all deep
purple. Many windows were broken and boarded over with
plywood. Three small bedrooms, a kitchen and living room
made up our living space. In the living room, a trap door
in the floor led into a musty dug-out basement.
My husband had always been a heavy drinker, but now he
drank in desperation. Often I had to phone utility
companies and plead for an extension because he had used
the money for liquor. To make things worse, when he was
drinking, he became abusive. The children and I began to be
afraid of him.
My husband was afraid to go into the dirt basement. He
refused even to lift the lid, but he couldn't explain why.
Great! It gave the kids and I a sanctuary for when he came
home drunk and mean. Soon we were spending three or four
nights a week down in that hole in the ground.
I always felt sort of uneasy when we were down there, and
the kids seemed to feel it, too. Nervousness about our
situation? I don't think so. Why didn't I leave him? My
husband was a sweet guy when he was sober. He didn't drink
on purpose. He was an alcoholic.
One night the kids were sound asleep. It was getting late,
and I knew I would eventually have to get the kids up and
flee into our hiding place. I had taken blankets and
pillows down into the hole and built us a nest behind the
vegetable bin.
I paced the floor. Two o'clock. I hated the thought of
waking the kids and dragging them down into the darkness.
Then I heard the baby crying.
Good. She had awakened on her own. I hurried into the
children's room. Now would be a good time to get them up
and go hide.
Both children were sound asleep. Baby Edith must have cried
out in her sleep. I stood there wondering if I should wake
them when the sound came again. A baby crying. I shivered.
None of our neighbors had small children. Where was the
crying coming from?
I followed the sound into the living room, right to the
basement door. There was a baby in our basement! I lifted
the lid and hurried down the stairs. Always cool, tonight
the basement was positively icy. The small dirt-encrusted
bulb gave little light but it was enough for me to see the
basement was empty. But I could still here the crying. It
seemed to come from all around me! I was scared. Something
wasn't right here.
I ran up the stairs, woke and dressed the kids and ran from
the house as my husband staggered around the corner. Thank
goodness he didn't see us. I didn't know the neighbors well
but, when Mrs. Chalmers opened the door, I begged for
sanctuary.
She hesitated, but finally let us in. We made a bed for the
kids on the chesterfield and they went back to sleep. Mrs.
Chalmers made a pot of tea. Reluctantly I explained about
my husband's drinking and my fear of him. I told her about
our many nights spent in the dark hole in the ground.
"But it wasn't your husband that drove you from the house
tonight, was it?"
Ten years earlier, she explained, an unwed mother had lived
in the house. "She was only sixteen," Mrs. Chalmers explained. "And
lonely. She started inviting people over, having parties."
The parties became wilder and noisier. Almost every night
loud music and laughter erupted until morning.
Then the baby got sick. Mrs. Chalmers could hear him crying
and coughing. She was sure the poor little thing had
pneumonia. Finally she went over and suggested the mother
take the child to the doctor. The girl agreed.
That night the music and partying continued as usual, but
no baby cried. The neighbor was sure he had been
hospitalized, and even more sure when she saw the girl
leave with her friends.
The young girl never came back. When the landlord finally
came to clean the house out, he found the body of the baby
in the basement. The little one had been alive when he'd
been carried down into the hole. Apparently he'd been put
down there because his crying disturbed her guests. And the
neighbors.
Since that time, no one had stayed long in the house. The
complaint was always the same, a baby crying in the
basement. I never went back. I took my children and fled
home to my family. It was what I should have done long
before. When my husband realized he was losing his wife and
children, he contacted Alcoholics Anonymous.
Eventually, thanks to the "ghost baby," we reconciled for a
long, happy marriage.
Contact Me Here: cardinal@telusplanet.net
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