domingo, 21 de marzo de 2021

 

“A Grandma Story”


FROM NOTEBOOK #3

PART 1/2


This happened just last year, though it also relates to things that happened when I was seven, maybe eight years old.


There’s a church called Our Lady of Temperance downtown, near the Ochre Towers housing complex. It’s not particularly outstanding, although I think it’s been around for at least fifty years. The façade is nice enough, but it’s clearly fallen into disrepair. I think there were intentions to declare it as “cultural heritage,” but the funding never materialized. The steps are dirty and frequented by the homeless. There’s a little gated garden to the side which houses an altar of the Virgin, and, if you’re lucky, a few napping stray cats. My grandma went to Mass there, without fail, for the last couple decades of her life.


Personally I’m sure I’ve been inside the church at least once or twice, as a child, but I don’t actually remember much. Looking up images online (there aren’t many), nothing about it seems particularly notable. It’s roomy and solemn enough, and there are some nice paintings of Bible scenes in between the stained-glass windows. I’ve been looking at pictures in an attempt to recall any memories of the church I may have, but it hasn’t worked so far. I guess I could just go there, but I think I’m going to need some time before I feel up to the task.


Anyway, back in October or so last year I was an intern for a friend’s dad’s textile company, doing some of the data entry and number-crunching, nothing special. In fact, it was mind-numbingly boring most of the time. Two saving graces, though: I didn’t have to dress formal, and I was unsupervised nearly all day. So naturally there was a lot of time wasted clicking around on the computer, idly chatting with friends. I was crammed into a little storage room, with boxes of dusty files and moth-eaten binders piled up to the ceiling behind me, and the glow of an old PC in front of me. Yellowed papers--ancient receipts, notarized letters, and heaps of stapled photocopies--were also stacked in front of me, neatly framing by claustrophobic “work station.” A monobloc chair and a company coffee mug were provided. To my right, a dusty window looked out over the industrial park where headquarters were located. My only company were the other administrative employees, all in their forties or older. So it was definitely a little grim. (This was also why I borrowed B.’s old Gameboy for a couple months, by the way.)


At the time I was so bored that I’d even refresh news pages throughout the day, since at least they were something to read. (The company’s IT person wasn’t sophisticated enough to block access to any sites, but I was too self-conscious to search for web games or porn on a work computer.) In those weeks, LPP* had inaugurated a “Citizen News” service, which produced online stories based on text-message reports submitted by citizens about the goings-on around town. It was a mess, obviously. Most people used it to complain about neighbors flaunting curbside parking regulations, or failing to pick up their dogs’ poop, or “loitering” in public parks (always a tinge of racism to those complaints), etc. I think it was retired just a few months later. Whatever came through those channels was either inconsequential or impossible to verify.


In my days of idle newswatching from the depths of that lonesome internship (I did last  eight months there), I stumbled into a Citizen News report that immediately caught my attention, because it came from Our Lady of Temperance. I hadn’t thought about the church in years by then, but it was etched into my mind as synonymous with my grandma, and my childhood. The contents were alarming. I can’t remember the exact wording of the headline, but it was something like: “Mysterious Stranger Terrifies Churchgoers at Morning Service.” Clicking through to the report revealed that it was tagged as a “developing story.” There were precious few details; the body was about as long as the headline. It went something like “multiple reports have surfaced of a mysterious figure in black whose presence has alarmed churchgoers at Our Lady of Temperance morning service.” This was happening as I sat in that chair, some ten kilometers away from me, on an October morning.


I thought about calling grandma to make sure she was alright--she was always present at morning Mass--before I remembered that, like most people her age, she didn’t have, or know how to use, a cell phone. I thought about calling my mom to alert her of the situation, but that felt like a step too far. Did I really want to worry her over what could very easily be a hoax, or a silly misunderstanding? What could a “mysterious figure in black” be doing in a Church, anyway? That hardly sounded like a robbery or a hostage situation. (Who robs a church?) In fact, it almost sounded like what you guys enjoy calling “Weird Shit,” and that wasn’t lost on me at the time. So I didn’t do anything for the moment. I sat on the edge of my seat and refreshed the page obsessively, having completely forgotten my obligations.


The first update to the story came approximately fifteen minutes later. An addendum to the body text: “Witnesses report that the figure has not engaged with or threatened churchgoers, and is simply walking about the building interiors. Service has not been interrupted.” (I’m heavily paraphrasing here, recalling from memory.) So at this point I fell back on my seat and relaxed a bit. This didn’t seem like much of anything, after all. At best, this was some old lady dressed in black who had rattled the most easily-rattled group of people in the world (churchgoing old people) with her presence. Maybe she was wearing a veil or something. I can see how that would be creepy. Some twenty minutes later, the webpage updated with a picture.


It was grainy, low-quality, badly-lit and what-have-you, but arguably that only made it more disturbing. Someone with a camera phone had managed to snap a picture of the mysterious stranger in the church. It was no old lady, that’s for sure. I distinctly remember feeling something in the pit of my stomach when the image loaded. It was a raggedy, tall, slender figure; almost certainly male, though impossible to be sure. It was completely covered in black fabric. Not like a ghostly sheet; it seemed to have been wrapped, from head to toe, in black, gauze-like rags. It was hard to discern the exact nature of the material from the picture. Wispy little frills trailed behind its feet. It has been caught in motion, prowling with an awkward gait across the halls that surrounded the pews. Its arms ended in tendrils of rags which could not be discerned as hands. The clothing didn’t seem functional, much less deliberate. It looked like someone who’d escaped from a hospital burn ward, or a grave.


I’m sorry, I keep saying “it” even though I now know that “it” was a “he.” At any rate, I could see why the stranger had caused such alarm. His face was completely invisible; I imagined that holes had been punched into the fabric for breathing and sight, but it was impossible to discern from the image provided. Its posture suggested a hunchback; it was impossible to determine height without something else in the image for comparison, but I would venture to guess he was taller than most.


I didn’t really know what to do at this point. The unreality of the situation washed over me like a cold sweat. Was anyone in danger? Was my grandma there? Was there any real motive for alarm? I continued to refresh the news page for the next fifteen minutes, but there were no updates. I wasn’t the only one who was bored at work, though. One or two user comments were appearing beneath the article. Nothing really notable: jokes about ghosts or predictions about the biblical apocalypse, etc. At the very least you couldn’t say it wasn’t attention-grabbing.


With nothing else to do, and no intention to get back to work, I texted a friend for her opinion. (You don’t know her; her identity’s not important to this story.) I told her to check the Citizen Report for the weirdest developing story. She rolled her eyes at me and chastised me for having nothing better to do. But then the texts started rolling in. Three different friends--F. among them, you can ask him--were following this story online. (Do you people have a sixth sense for “Weird Shit” that I haven’t developed yet?) Apparently we were all very bored, and very interested. I started exchanging opinions over the phone until the news site updated again.


* This is a local news broadcast network (the initials have been changed for anonymity).

14 comentarios:

  1. Amazing stuff, the ambientation of these is just so well done. I think this is what I love most about these entries, they're so nostalgic and palpable. Can't wait to read the second part of this.

    ResponderEliminar
  2. I've been re-reading some entries, as I eagerly await for the next update to this incident.
    Back in "the list of X", there is a mention of "the lake where we freed things we will probably never understand". Then there's the "Multiple Births" tape B saw in his childhood, and of course, the sacrifice of a "virgin" (the goose) to the cursed hole, after which all the fish died.
    And now, this entry features a strange humanoid figure. Very very eagerly looking forward for the next! I'm quite sure this is all related.
    (andonce again deadly curious about the abandoned baby stroller, the strange offices/hospital/hotel, the record stores, and so on)

    Also, I don't know if this is possible, but if that would be okay with you LB, I'd LOVE to see a photo of the physical notebooks themselves. I fully understand if you'd rather not though. I love this story.

    ResponderEliminar
  3. Please give us some more. I dream about this story

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  4. In the name of GOD L.B. i crave the rest of the books of sand with all the might of my soul, wherever you are whatever you are doing, if you read this know that there are many people very much interested on your work bro, please share more with us.

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  5. I re-read these occasionally, I especially love the Origins and posts about when they were younger. Each time it draws me in to making notes on the links between the stories....
    So what did happened in D's garden, was it linked to F's statues and the clan?

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  6. I've been following your writings for a decade now, I think, ever since it was first posted on /x/. There's something about your writing style that resonates deep within me, and I want you to know I've enjoyed this stories immensely. You're truly talented, I hope you and your family are well and whatever place you are in life right now is the place you want to be in, thank you for sharing this stories.

    ResponderEliminar
  7. What happened to new posts every weekend LB? D:

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    Respuestas
    1. ngl every time he disappears like that it makes me anxious that something bad happened to him

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  8. I hope LB is fine. I am misding these entries.

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  9. Been thinking about this for a decade now, it formed the way i think a little. Is there any way to contact OP?

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    Respuestas
    1. "it formed the way i think a little." Haha, glad I'm not the only one. It's the best online secret I've ever had, and as much as I want it to blow up it's also crazy that it hasn't and kind of adds to the mystery. I wish there was a way to walk to LB, dude is so mysterious, at least to talk about funding and collaborations I've seen mentioned in his comments. I respect that hes doing this for the art alone but this could really become huge if he wanted.

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  10. I've read through these and I still barely understand what exactly is going on. Would love more entries if OP is out there!

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  11. LB, you cant imagine how much it means to come back after a long absence and see more threads of the story unraveling. Dont worry about life catching up to you, I have been Ill for a long time and know plans sometimes change but if you're waiting for something good no wait it too long. This had got to be the weirdest shit so far. The rote insanity of your is really getting to me. "Service not interrupted" indeed. Brilliant work as always getting this together!

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