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‘Of course it was a plant,’ said
Tanya, who was essentially a logical woman. ‘And so stupid those
parents were taking a 10 year old child on something like this. So
scary. Now, poor little thing, he’ll dream all night.’
Tanya stared at the row of recently vacated seats in the bus before
turning back to her husband.
‘And you’re so gullible. And just look at us all here: a busload of
fools! There is nothing in life that cannot be explained
scientifically.’
‘But you heard the noises. And I saw you were scared, damn scared,’
replied Kee Long who was tired at this stage of life of listening to
his wife’s opinions and finding she was usually right.
‘Of course I was scared. Just like I am scared in those ghost houses
at fairgrounds where skeletons and monsters jump out at you. You know
it’s not real, but you still feel scared, otherwise why would people
go in there?’
‘So then, how do you explain those noises?’ Kee Long asked sullenly.
‘They can plant a speaker anywhere they like. If they don’t want you
to see it, you won’t.’ Tanya shrugged.
‘Yeah. Probably,’ Kee Long conceded ungraciously.
‘You know it has been scientifically proved that what many people see
as a ghost, especially in places with lots of vegetation, is no more
than phosphorous rising up from the ground from rotting leaves and
stuff. I saw a TV programme about it once.’ Tanya was growing steadily
more scornful of the tour, determined to see it for what it was, a
tourist gimmick.
‘Okay. You win. But keep your mouth shut in front of Lay Lin. Don't
spoil her pleasure with all your scientific explanations,’ Kee Long
warned.
‘Of course I won’t, stupid,’ Tanya replied.
This conversation had been carried out in low voices some rows from
their daughter who had moved away briefly to chat with Kelly the tour
guide.
The bus began to move again. The lights of a shopping complex and a
Cold Storage passed by. A hawker centre, deserted and shuttered for
the night, appeared and quickly receded. Great blocks of HDB flats
grew before them now on both sides of the road. Tanya stared out of
the bus at the seemingly endless floors and endless windows, each
small unit holding a family busy with its own activities and problems.
Modern Singapore had no place for ghosts. They just did not fit in at
all. Perhaps that was why these kinds of tours intrigued people. They
supplied a mystery Singapore now lacked and had obviously once been
full of.
Even as she thought these thoughts the bus turned off the main
thoroughfare into a side road and they were suddenly transported into
a different world. There were still streetlights at odd intervals
along the road. They illuminated the thick growth of trees in the
gardens of the large houses that dominated the area. The facades of
these could occasionally be glimpsed, opulent if unimaginative. Once
or twice they passed an older type of house, comfortably dilapidated
amidst its more wealthy neighbours.
Tanya continued to peer out of the window, her nose pressed to the
glass. The houses petered out and then seemed suddenly to cease and
she was left with only the black density on both sides of the road,
pressing in about her. Once a street light lit up a tall tree whose
trunk was constricted by a muscular vine. She thought at once of the
thick body of a snake squeezing all life from the plant. Now against
the darkness all she could see was the illumination of her own face in
the glass of the window, drifting like a ghost itself, against the
blackness of the trees. The darkness trapped by these thickets of
vegetation seemed to harbour a life of its own, something knowing and
waiting. It was as if the very blackness watched her. With a shiver
Tanya turned her attention back to the lighted interior of the bus and
laughed in sudden relief.
‘And here we are at our last destination,’ said Kelly brightly through
the loudspeaker, cutting short her conversation with Lay Lin.
‘And I warn you all, I think this one’s really the scariest!’
The bus turned abruptly into a gravel driveway and stopped. The door
of the vehicle was opened and they all clambered out. Several
strategically placed lights illuminated the spacious grounds of the
place. There had once been a fine garden here but now it was long
overgrown, thrusting in towards the house that stood at its centre.
Some dim lights had been lit inside in preparation for their arrival,
but these only seemed to deepen the melancholy of the old house. It
was built in the style Europeans so admired
in a not so long ago colonial time. A tall porticoed entrance faced
them; it had once been a splendid place. Now, the crumbling stucco,
blackened by age and neglect, green with lichen, presented a sad
façade. It stood as the remnant of a past era, its memories lost in
time.
Kelly gathered the group about her. ‘There was a suicide in this house
in the 1940’s. She was a young girl of seventeen who fell in love with
someone her parents disapproved of. She ran off with him but was soon
found and brought home. It was a great scandal at the time for she was
from a well-known and wealthy family and the young man was a penniless
clerk. The girl’s father paid for him to disappear; no one knows what
happened to him. The young girl, her name was Madeleine, was so
distraught that she hung herself. That upper corner right hand window
was her room. And that’s where we’re going, to the very place where
she died. The bedroom is still just as it was on the day she hung
herself. Her dolls still sit on the chest of drawers. One of them, it
is dressed in red velvet, they say was her favorite and her ghost
inhabits it. Be careful everyone, better not touch that doll. On the
night of each full moon they say you can sometimes see the silhouette
of Madeleine’s body hanging from a rafter, through the window of her
room.’ Kelly gave a quick laugh to lighten things. She turned to lead
them to the house.
(To be continued...)

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