As the cold wind whipped around the side of the old homestead, Maggie Burnsford felt at peace for the first time since she had buried her husband months earlier. That very afternoon, she had had her Tarot cards read by a woman in town. Even though when she walked into the darkened room, she was skeptical, when she walked out, she was a true believer in the afterlife. Maggie had tagged along with a couple of friends to get the reading done just for a giggle but what that lady had to say, about things totally unknown to her, somewhat spooked Maggie into believing that there must be something to this afterlife thing after all. What other explanation could there be for her knowing the things she knew.
When Barry had a heart attack and went toes up on her, the only thing he had left Maggie was a shit load of bills and a lot of heartache. She had agonized over how to pay off the bills for weeks before coming to the upsetting conclusion that she was going to lose the car, the house, everything. The house was now on the market and unless she could come up with $16,000 before it was sold, she would lose it forever.
The trip to the card reader had been her friend’s way of trying to take her mind off the problems at hand since none of them where able to help in any other way. But when Maggie stepped out of the back room in which the readings were done and back into the store, her friends began to think that it was not such a good idea after all, she looked so… spooked. Hands shaking, hair standing on end and quiet as a church mouse all showing that something was amiss. On top of that, Maggie was puffing away on cigarettes all the way home and they all knew that Maggie only ever smoked when something was eating at her mind. And this was something big, they just wouldn’t know how big until a few weeks later.
Flicking her long black hair out of her eyes Maggie had walked into the room to get her reading done and paused a moment to let her eyes adjust to the lighting. The woman who was to do the reading became very uneasy, fidgeting and jumping at the smallest sounds, like the chair legs scraping the wooden floor as Maggie pulled it out to sit down, making her bracelets jingle like a musical instrument. The room was dimly lit and smelt faintly of sandalwood that gave it a pleasant and relaxing feel. The reader introduced herself as Ruby and told Maggie that even though she was there for a card reading; somebody was coming through from the other side that badly needed to speak with her. Ruby had began to mumble under her breath and Maggie could just make out the words, “Calm down, she is here with me”. Explaining that the spirit had entered the room so quickly and in such a rash manner, Ruby began to settle herself again, rearranging her flaming red hair. Maggie knew beyond a doubt that there was no way possible for Ruby to know anything about her or her life, so when she announced that a man named Barry was there with them in spirit, it threw Maggie for a six.
Speaking for Barry, Ruby told Maggie that he had had a life insurance policy, which she would need to find and claim before the sale of the house. And just like Barry when he was alive, he could not remember where he had put the paper work or whom the company was that he held the policy with, she would just have to hunt for it. But the thing that really got Maggie believing was when she spoke of their trip away some four years earlier. Ruby told of how Barry had given Maggie some money to go shopping and told her that he had a headache and needed a lie down, then when she had gone, he went and took out the insurance policy not wanting her to know about it because she would say that it was a waste of money and that nothing was ever going to happen to him.
So now as Maggie stood under a hot shower with the wind whipping around the house she loved, she tried to think of every possible place Barry could have hidden the papers. He did not have a safety deposit box that she knew of, but then again she didn’t know about the insurance policy either! Over and over in her mind she tried to work it out but couldn’t come up with any place that she wouldn’t have discovered at some point over the last four years since he had taken the policy out.
While walking in town three days later, Maggie noticed something out of the corner of her eye but when she turned back to see what it was, there was nothing there to be seen. It had looked like a white light coming from the restaurant that her and Barry used to eat at every week. Feeling as though something was pulling at her, she decided to stop in there for lunch. Ordering her usual Maggie felt as if there where eyes watching her but instead of giving her a creepy feeling it made her feel safe and protected, like she used to when Barry was with her.
That night everything inside and outside the house was so very still and quiet that when the bathroom door slammed shut Maggie just about jumped out of her skin. Going upstairs to see what had happened she had to pass the kitchen. As she went past the kitchen doorway she noticed at first that the drawing pins in the corkboard had been rearranged. Going in for a closer look she found that they had been put into some sort of pattern but it didn’t look familiar to her. Leaving the drawing pins in place Maggie made her way upstairs on shaking legs only to get to the bathroom, open the door and found the room steamed up as if someone had just got out of the bath or shower. Directly opposite the bathroom door was the cabinet and mirror and what she saw in that mirror would remain in her mind for the rest of her life.
Maggie did not see words in the steam on the mirror but instead she saw a drawing, and such a life like drawing at that. The building she saw drawn there did not look like any building that she knew of but it still gave her the feeling that she had been there at some time or another, maybe even in another life. Running to the bedroom on legs that felt like rubber to grab a piece of paper and a pencil she thought that maybe if she drew the picture and looked at it long enough then it would click into place.
After drawing the building she then returned back downstairs and underneath it she drew the pattern that was on the corkboard. Knowing these two things were somehow connected she wondered if they were a message from Barry. They had to be, why else would this sort of thing start happening to her now? Feeling confident that these were messages from the other side, the next morning Maggie headed for the town library to take out a book on spirit communications to see if she could find any way of sending a return message or a way to interpret the messages she had received.
Sitting up in bed later that night reading her book, she found that these were normal ways to receive messages from the other side and that all she had to do in return was to voice her questions out load and the spirit who is trying to communicate would hear her. In a shaking voice Maggie spoke to the walls of the bedroom she and Barry had shared, “Barry? Is that you sending me messages?” Flopping back on the pillows and feeling like the biggest kind of fool, Maggie wondered if she was having a mental breakdown to think that this could be really happening. She lay her book on her night table, turned off her bedside lamp and laid back to go to sleep.
Startled awake by a noise, Maggie rolled onto her side to have a look at the time on the clock beside the bed. 12.23am, “Great, the Witching hour!” she said aloud into the dark room. That was when she noticed the tapping noise coming from inside the wall, which must have been what had woken her to start with. “Is that you Barry?” she asked in a frightened voice. Not expecting a reply, her heart leapt into her mouth when there was an answering tap. “Whoever you are, tap once for yes and twice for no, do you understand?” Again came the single tap as before. “I ask again, is that you Barry?” One tap. “Was it you that left the pattern on the corkboard today?” One tap. “Was it you that drew the picture on the mirror?” One tap. “Does this have to do with the insurance policy?” One tap. “Do you remember where it is Barry?” No answer. Maggie repeated this last question and got no sign that he was still there.
Waking late the following morning Maggie felt the urge to return to the library to see what else she could find. Because the information in one book could be so accurate, imagine what she could find in the others that were there. Walking in to the darkened interior of the building, she looked up behind the desk and noticed an old photograph only to find that it was a photo of the very same building that had been on her mirror. Asking the Liberian about it, she discovered that it was in fact the very building that she was standing in, only 60 years earlier.
In 1941, an earthquake that had all but demolished the town library had hit the area in which Maggie now lived. The new library had been built on the same site 3 years later. But what this had to do with her and Barry she didn’t know.
After telling all this to Maggie, the woman behind the desk mentioned Barry’s death and the strange week before it. Not having any idea what she was talking about, Maggie prodded her for information on what she meant. According to the woman, Barry had been coming into the library and staying all day, every day, for the week leading up to his death. When she inquired why he wasn’t at work he simply said that he had given it up for better things. Unlike his usual readings of Westerns, he had spent this week not just reading, but studying the paranormal arts, life after death, spirit guides and the likes. Obtaining a list of the books in which he had been studying, which were numerous, Maggie went to gather what should could find of them.
Sitting at a desk an hour later with a mountain of books in front of her, she wondered yet again if she was losing her mind. Well, she had nothing better to do, she may as well just get started to see if she could discover what it was that had Barry so interested in the subject, and who knows maybe she might ever find an answer to her present problem. By the time the library was ready to close for the day at 5.00 o’clock, Maggie had been through about 6 of the 19 that were on the list. She marked those off the list and keeping aside two of the books, she put the rest back in their right places on the shelves then checked out the two she kept and headed home for dinner.
Folding her legs underneath her and making herself comfortable on the floor with a pizza Maggie continued her work. About an hour later as she turned a page she noticed a slip of paper fall out from between the pages. With her fingers feeling like ice and her heart drumming an unsteady rhythm in her ears, she turned to the page that had been marked with the paper, to find it headed “Ways to Communicate from Beyond the Grave.” Underneath the heading was a list of ways to send messages from the other side, including the trick with the pins on the corkboard, the bathroom mirror and tapping on walls among others. Maggie felt her body turn cold from head to toe and could feel her hands shaking as she turned the page. She flicked back to the front cover to see what the title of the book was but instead found the very same pattern on the front as she had found one the corkboard. How she had not noticed this earlier, she didn’t know.
Lying in her warm bed that night, after many hours of considering the idea Maggie finally decided to take a trip back to the place where they had holidayed to make a search of the area for Insurance Companies. With having made the decision, she drifted off into an uneasy sleep.
Being back in the town that they had enjoyed together had a unsettling effect upon Maggie and she found that she could not sit still for any longer than about 10 minutes at a time unless she was sleeping, which she did very little of. She just wanted to get the task at hand done and get home again. The day she arrived was a sweltering hot day and with the sweat dripping from her body Maggie made the rounds of the Insurance Companies within the town limits. Sitting on the steps of the second to last place she had to visit Maggie felt exhaustion like she never had before. Finding a hidden resource of strength, she pulled herself to her feet and made her way inside the building to see what she could discover.
Explaining the situation for what felt like the 50th time that day, she wondered if she was ever going to find anything to help her or if it was all just a waste of time and effort. She was running out of time to find the money for the house and if she didn’t find something soon she would lose it. Maggie went on to try and convince the Manager to have a look through their records to see if anybody by Barry’s name held a policy with them. Being a kind hearted man and sympathizing with her situation, he told her that he would do what he could and for her to return the next day to hear the results, if there were indeed any at all.
The following day Maggie found what she had been searching for, evidence of the policy. The manager of the Combined Insurance Company had found in his search that they did indeed have a policy for Barry Burnsfield. The total amount came to just over $1 million but the catch was that Maggie still had to find the paper work to produce before they could act on the policy. There was no getting around this so she proceeded to return home to have another through search of the house.
Still turning up nothing after the second search she plonked down in a chair tired and discouraged but not giving up. She would save her home; she just had to work out how! Glancing down at the coffee table on which the drawing of the building and the design were sitting, she began to study the design again. She now knew what the building was but what about the pattern?
Without a moment’s notice, everything clicked into place. The building was the library where she would, and had, found the way Barry would communicate. The design on the corkboard, she knew now must have something to do with where the papers were hidden. She had worked out for herself where the insurance policy was held so now she had two out of three problems solved. The idea of a safety deposit box would not leave Maggie so she felt that she should go with her feelings.
With an idea slowly forming in her mind, Maggie stood up and went to the computer. She scanned the corkboard design then entered it in a search engine. This way, if there was anything on the Internet about it, she would find it. The computer finished the search and it had found a match.
The design was the logo for a safety deposit box company, which was in the next town over.
Making the short trip the next day Maggie had no problem finding the place. Being concerned about how she would get on, she stepped up to the main desk and explained the situation. She was told that it would not be a problem as long as she had I.D. and a copy of Barry’s death certificate, both of which she had in her purse. After producing both pieces of paperwork, she was given a key, told the number of the box and shown to a room to go through the contents. Bingo!! There laying inside the box was the paperwork to the insurance policy Barry had taken out.
Returning to the car with all the paper work, Maggie thought that she might as well go straight to C.I.C. to present them with the papers so things could get under way.
Encountering no more problems, she was assured that $1.3 million would be in her bank account within two weeks.
Feeling calmer and more relaxed then she had in months Maggie sat at home and wondered if she would ever have contact with Barry again when there was a knock at the front door. Glancing through the small window beside the door, she saw Ruby standing on the porch looking nervous. Wondering what she was doing there Maggie opened the door and asked her inside.
“I was just curious to see how you got on”’ explained Ruby once she was seated at the kitchen table with a cup of coffee.
“Yea, good! I found the policy after a lot of searching and things are in motion. I should have the money soon. I feel as though I owe you something for everything you did for me so…” Maggie let the sentence drift off unfinished.
“I just want to know one thing,” Ruby told her. “How did you end up finding it?”
Maggie explained about the different things that had happened and how they had led her to find the policy.
“So do you believe that Barry contacted you?” Ruby asked.
After a moment or two of thought Maggie replied that she didn’t see any other explanation. “Do you?” she asked.
“No.”
The one word said a lot to Maggie. Sitting in a companionable silence for the next five minutes, they both contemplated this new development. Surprising Maggie, Ruby asked,
“Do you think you could contact others?”
“What? Others that have passed on? Other than Barry?”
“Yes,” answered Ruby, surprised that Maggie would think the idea so far-fetched.
“I don’t know. I never really thought about it.” Maggie’s mind was spinning with the possibility.
“Would you be willing to give it a go?”
“I don’t see why not but I would have no idea how to go about it”. Maggie wondered silently what she was standing in the doorway of.
“We could work on it together,” Ruby suggested with a plan forming in her mind.
Strongly believing that there was a reason behind everything that happened, Ruby wondered why Maggie had been sent to her.
Over the next couple of months Maggie and Ruby became close friends, spending evenings together contacting the dead, and many days together at Ruby’s shop where Maggie was helping out.
Sitting at the kitchen table drinking coffee, Ruby finally approached Maggie with a proposition that she had been thinking about for months.
“How would you like to become a partner in the business?” Then after a pause of thought, she added, “Don’t get me wrong, the business is not in trouble or anything like that. It’s just that I think you are talented, I trust you and I like you and you seem to enjoy the work. It makes perfect sense to me, that is, as long as you are keen of course.”
Without having to consider this new development Maggie responded with a quick
“I would love to!” She had been hoping for the last few weeks that Ruby would come up with the idea and she was just getting to the point where she was going to bring the subject up herself.
Maggie was comfortable financially, she was starting out in a new business venture where she was helping people, both living and un-living, and she had developed a great new friendship with someone she had a great deal of respect for. Still having contact with Barry filled the final hole in her heart. Life was good!