Candle Cove: Day of the Dead

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"Most of the laugh tracks on television were recorded in the early 1950s. These days, the people you hear laughing are dead." - Chuck Palahniuk, "Lullaby"


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"We don't have to talk about it if you don't want to, of course."

"I thought that's what your job was about: talking?"

"Actually, Mrs. Chelsea, I would say that my job is about trust. I can't expect people who don't trust me to talk about sensitive things with me. So this session is entirely in your hands."

"I'll talk about it. Therapy was my idea, after all. They said that since there was just the one incident it wasn't really necessary but...I thought it was a good idea."

"Alright then. Tell me what happened."

"It was just a drawing on the sidewalk. A stencil, you know? Artists leaving them around the city, sometimes, and I was out shopping with my family when my son pointed it out. It was a skeleton wearing a top hat, and it had the word "Saturday" underneath it. What do you think that means?"

"It sounds like Baron Samedi."

"Who?"

"He's a loa; a voodoo spirit. He watches over the dead and he's usually represented by a top hat and a skull. 'Samedi' means 'Saturday.' So this drawing frightened you?"

"I kind of had a fit when I saw it. They called it an anxiety attack. They even took me to the hospital."

"And what did they find out?"

"They said there's nothing wrong with me physically. They talked about stress and lack of sleep. And they said I should talk it easy but not to worry unless it happened again. But I'm worried anyways."

"Has anything like this ever happened before?"

"Once. The same day...that my son died."

"You said your son was the one who noticed the stencil?"

"That's my youngest son, Dylan. I had an older son, Jonah. But he's not with us anymore. He was murdered five years ago."

"I'm very sorry, Mrs. Chelsea. Can I ask if you received any psychological counseling afterwards?"

"No. I was busy with Dylan, you see. Isn't it strange? The day Jonah died was the same day I found out I was pregnant again. And I guess I just...poured everything into managing the pregnancy. So that I wouldn't think about anything else. And for years, I didn't. Not until this week. Should I talk about the murder?"

"As I said, you don't have to talk about anything you don't want to."

"I...I'll talk about it.

"Jonah was fifteen; I had him when I was still in high school. He was very gifted. He played the cello, and the piano, and they made him the organist at our church. That was what got him into trouble.

"The minister was friends with my husband, Jonah's stepfather, and he loved to hear Jonah play, so he put him at the organ. Everyone loved him. It wasn't just that Jonah was talented, he was...I guess you could say he had a performer's charisma. I...I'm sorry, it's hard to talk about..."

"It's alright, Mrs. Chelsea. Should we change the subject?"

"No, I've already said this much. Something people liked about Jonah, he would always play the hymns but he'd play some of his own music too, before and after the service. He composed his own material; it was very strange sounding, but everyone liked it. Well, almost everyone. One day a man came to us after church and told him to stop."

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