The Walking Doll
None of us likes to think of our
children being exposed to spirits. Yet, with their untrammeled imaginations
they are arguably more likely to be open to influences that do not fit into the
confines of the adult trained (rather constrained) mind. Part of the price of
adulthood is the fear of the unknown and the sometimes irrational fear of
exposing our children to those things we cannot understand…
My
name is Ibram. That is a bit like an Englishman saying that my name is Smith. I
live in Perlis, which is the smallest state in Malaysia. Originally I came from
Pahang. I don’t want my parents worrying about me if they read this, so please
understand that Ibram is not my real name! I am Malay, and I graduated from
University of Science Malaysia (USM) in Penang ten years ago. I worked hard,
got married, started a family and then moved with my family into a new house at
Kangar, the capital of Perlis.
The new house was quite a nice place, and quite
cheap. Butt something happened shortly after we moved in that convinced me that
we had bought a haunted house.
The story concerns my daughter. She is now five
years old. I bought her a doll for her birthday. One night, after she had gone
to bed, she left the doll on a chair in the TV room. My wife and I were
watching television. Suddenly, my wife called out to me in alarm.
‘Look at the doll! It is moving.’
I spun
around and looked. Sure enough, the doll’s arms and legs kicked out left and
right. Its head tossed from side to side as if it had a sore neck and was
trying to lessen the pain. It seemed to jump on to the floor and started to
move across the room.
My wife screamed. I was terrified, but I leaped out
of my chair and grabbed the doll. I ran through the back door and across the
yard. I threw it into the garbage bin. I slammed the lid on the bin and placed
a large stone on top of it.
‘That should keep it safe till the garbage men come
tomorrow,’ I thought, but I was far from convinced.
I returned to the room to find my wife shaking with
fear. Both of us felt quite unsettled. I made doubly sure that I locked the
door behind me when I came back in.
‘That won’t do much good,’ suggested my wife, her
eyes wide with fear and puzzlement.
‘What else can I do?’ I asked. ‘I can’t believe what I just saw.’
‘Do you think we need to do anything else?’ she
asked.
‘Like what?’ I said and looked at her fondly. I was
as frightened as she was.
‘Maybe ask someone who knows about these things to
sort it out for us,’ she added. ‘We can’t allow anything to upset our
daughter.’
I nodded. ‘She will be upset in the morning when
she finds out that her doll has gone,’
We looked at each other for a long time,
occasionally glancing toward the back yard as if expecting something terrible
to come bursting into the house.
Finally I heaved a sigh. ‘Let’s go to sleep now.
I’ll ask around tomorrow and get some advice.’
‘And some help!’ added my wife.
Next morning, my daughter woke early. She came into
the lounge room. She looked round the room.
‘Where is my doll?’ she asked.
What could I say? I hate to admit this but I told
her a lie. ‘We had to send it to the cleaners as it was getting dirty,’ I said
and smiled reassuringly.
‘But she was only new,’ she cried.
‘I know,’ I replied, ‘but you were playing with it
in the dirt under the tree yesterday, weren’t you?’
She pouted,
but seemed satisfied.
‘The cleaners won’t hurt her, will they?’ she
asked.
‘They wouldn’t dare,’ I said and smiled again.
The first thing I resolved to do was to visit the
toy store where I had bought the doll. I wanted buy one just the same. Well,
almost the same. I did not want to buy one that walked across the floor!
The next day passed uneventfully. The garbage men
came in the morning and I watched as they crossed to the garbage bin and lifted
off the heavy rock I had placed on it. Then they emptied the garbage can’s
contents into the truck and drove off. I certainly hoped that we had seen the
last of the doll.
Immediately the shops were open I drove to the toy
store. I looked everywhere in the shop. I could find no dolls that were the
same as the one I had bought my daughter.
Panicking just a little, I searched for the owner
of the shop.
‘I bought a doll here a week ago,’ I said to the
owner, an old Chinese lady. Now Kanga is a small town, and everyone knows
everyone else. Certainly, the shop owner remembered me and remembered when I
had bought the doll.
‘We have one left, but I put it aside because I
wanted to give it to my granddaughter for Chinese New Year,’ she said.
Crestfallen, I was about to thank her and leave,
when she must have noticed how upset I was.
‘Is there something wrong?’ she asked kindly.
I nodded and told her what had happened, but
omitted to tell her that the doll had jumped off the chair and walked across
the room. I just said I had inadvertently thrown the doll out into the garbage.
When I had finished, she simply smiled and lifted her hand.
‘I understand perfectly,’ she said. ‘You just wait
there and I’ll get it for you.’
I tried to protest but she smiled.
‘Don’t
worry,’ she said. ‘I can find something else for my granddaughter for her gift.
After all, I have a toy shop!’
I thanked
her for her kindness and took the doll home, locking it carefully in my brief
case.
After my daughter went to bed that night, I put the
doll in a place where she would see it first thing the following morning when
she woke up.
‘Do you think we will have any more trouble?’ asked
my wife as we drank tea and thought about the events f the previous evening.
‘How do I know?’ I asked.
‘Did you ask for any help?’ she continued.
I shook my head. ‘I really don’t know where to
start,’ I said. ‘Anyway, who would believe me if I told them what happened?’
‘You might be surprised!’ said my wife and I nodded
quietly. After all, everyone knows about strange happenings and ghosts and
things.
‘Let’s just wait and see,’ I said.
My wife nodded slowly, unconvinced, but happy to
agree with me—for a while at least.
If we thought all of our troubles were over, we
were wrong. We sat watching television (OK, what else are we supposed to do in
Perlis at night?) when I heard a noise outside the window. I looked up,
worried. A young girl was peering through the window.
Puzzled I got up.
‘Where are you going?’ she asked.
‘Didn’t you hear a noise in the yard? I asked, but
she shook her head.
I nodded. ‘I’ll just check to make sure everything
is fine,’ I said and walked out of the back door.
The girl turned to look at me. She wore a baju curing
was watching me. It surprised me, as it was the sort of dress girls wear in
Pahang, my home state.
‘Please ask your wife to come out,’ asked the girl.
I shook my head. ‘No!’ I said and put my fingers to
my lips.
She spoke again. This time her voice was louder.
‘Please ask your wife to come out.’
I glanced back into the sitting room. Thankfully,
my wife still took no notice. Was she aware of that was happening? She did not
seem to be.
I turned to the girl.
‘It is so late at night,’ I said. ‘Why is a young
girl like you out so late?’
The young girl simply stared at me and said nothing
more. I frowned. This was all so odd. She sighed, turned, and disappeared.
I returned to the house and sat quietly in my chair.
My wife paid me no attention. She was engrossed in her TV programmed. She
seemed hardly to have noticed what had happened. I said nothing.
My thoughts ran in all directions. What had
happened was so odd. Who was the girl? How did she know my wife’s name She had
seemed t just disappear? What was happening? Was there a connection between the
girl and the dancing doll?
Next morning, I resolved to find someone who could
advise me and maybe help with the strange occurrences of the past two nights:
the doll and the strange young girl. I was almost convinced she was not
‘human’. Were the two strange occurrences related somehow? I had no idea.
I remembered an Indian friend who had mentioned
that he was a medium—a bomoh. I decided to ask him if he could help. I did not
want my Malay friends to get worried, nor did I want them to reprimand me for
my actions and my fears. So I decided to keep it all hush!
Next morning, everything seemed fine. My daughter
was delighted when she saw her doll back in its chair.
‘It is so clean,’ she said. ‘It looks like new.’
For a while she inspected it closely. She looked at me with a puzzled face and
I was afraid that she had noticed something different. But eventually she
nodded, and cuddled the doll to her.
After she had gone off to school and my wife left
for her work, I called my Indian friend and asked him to come over. He promised
to come immediately.
He arrived almost immediately and we sat down. He
asked me to tell him everything that happened. I told him about the doll and how
it moved its arms and legs and even seemed to walk across the floor. He nodded
without showing the least bit of surprise. I told him about the strange visit
from the young girl, and how she wanted to see my wife. Once again, he nodded.
‘Let’s go and check around the house. I want to
look under the house and everywhere in the garden,’ he said.
‘What are you looking for?’ I asked.
‘I just want to check every corner,’ he said.
I was curious, and followed him into the garden. He
looked everywhere. He turned over pots. He lifted some timber up that I had
stored under the house awaiting some renovations. He moved to the fence
adjoining the vacant lot next door. He stopped. He pointed. There in the tall
grass on the other side of the fence was my daughter’s doll.
I was shocked.
‘But I put it in the garbage bin and placed a large
stone in top,’ I said. ‘How could it get out?’
‘When it comes to these things,’ he said, ‘we can’t
always explain how things happen. It is as if there is another universe that
the spirits live in. It does not use the same laws that govern our universe.’
My friend picked up the doll and looked carefully
at it. Then he nodded and turned to me and smiled.
‘Things will be fine, my friend,’ he said. ‘Let’s
go back inside.’
He asked me to fetch him a bowl of clean water and
some fresh limes. He placed the doll on a small table. He placed the bowl of
water next to the doll. He sliced the lime, and squeezed some of the juice into
the water, stirring it up. It was all
very strange to me. We believe in spirits, but this was all so odd. I hoped my
Malay friends were not watching.
He lifted up the bowl and studied it carefully.
Then he put it down slowly on the table. He positioned it so that it was
leaning against the bowl. He touched the doll. It moved, but I thought maybe it
moved because he touched it.
He lifted his hand off the doll, and it seemed to
sigh. It sagged and fell into a heap on the table.
He closed his eyes and muttered some words in a
tongue I did not understand. His voice was low, grating and quite mysterious.
He kept the monotone going for quite some time.
I was getting a little anxious, as my wife would
soon be coming back. I tried to say something but he quickly raised his hand in
annoyance and indicated that I must stay quiet.
Finally, he stopped his murmuring and opened his
eyes. He turned to me.
‘This house
is haunted by the spirit of a young girl,’ he said. ‘She was attacked and
raped. She was so upset by what had happened that she could not get over it.
Eventually it all became too much for her to bear, and she took her own life.’
‘Suicide?’ I asked, shocked.
He nodded.
‘When did this happen”, I asked.
‘About five years ago,’ he answered.
‘Where?’
‘In this house,’ he said and looked at me to see how I would
react.
No one has ever said anything to me about that,’ I said. ‘You
would think they would, wouldn’t you?’
‘Not if they wanted to sell the house,’ he said, but he did not
smile.
I took a deep breath. Had I known…
‘Is there anything you can do?’ I asked.
He nodded. ‘Just a moment. I need total silence. This won’t take
long,’ he said.
He took a purple coloured bottle out of a bag he was carrying. He
made some more strange noises that, to be frank with you, scared me. I started
to ask what he was doing, but once again he held up his hand and motioned that
I should keep silent.
As I watched him, I got more and more worried. He quivered and
shook. His face dripped with perspiration. The doll jerked again. I felt a
strong breeze and a high pitched whistle, or was it a muted scream? Finally he
gave what sounded like a triumphant shout and slammed the cap back onto the
bottle, twisting it tightly.
He turned to me and nodded. ‘Everything is fine now,’ he said. ‘I
have the spirit of the dead girl in this bottle. I will arrange for it to have
a proper burial. She will find peace.’
I was about to point out that she was Malay, but again he held up
his hand.
‘It is fine now,’ he said. ‘Someone will arrange for her to be at
peace. She will not bother you again.’
‘What about the doll?’ I said.
‘I will take it with me,’ he said. ‘I think that the girl once
owned a doll like that – ‘ and he stopped suddenly and leaned towards the
bottle on the table as if he was listening again. He nodded and turned back to
look at me. ‘Maybe even that one.’
‘But it was new when I bought it,’ I protested.
‘Possibly,’ he replied.
‘I don’t understand,’ I said.
‘Few of us do,’ he replied and smiled gently at me.
I nodded. ‘One thing makes
me curious. Why did she call out for my wife?’
My friend again paused as if he was listening to someone talking
to him. He nodded once again. ‘She wanted comfort. She remembered how happy she
had been when she had the doll. She did not want to upset your daughter who is
so young and so innocent,’ he said. ‘She thought your wife would understand.’
I nodded. ‘Maybe!’ I said. ‘Who knows?’
He paused and looked out into the garden. He walked to the window
and stared for a few moments into the sky. After a while, he turned to me. ‘I
have good news for you,’ he said gently. ‘You and your wife and daughter and
son…’
‘I have no son,’ I said.
‘You will soon!’ he replied and smiled again at me. ‘You will all
live happily in this house. As for your daughter’s new doll, she will only move
when your daughter plays with her. That is a promise.’
He stood up.
‘How much do I owe you?’ I asked.
He smiled at me. ‘We are friends,’ he said. ‘Let’s have dinner one
evening.’
I nodded quietly. Some people are really special. He was one of
them.
He left. Would that be the end of things?
Whatever he did, it worked.
We have lived happily in the house ever since. And the new doll only moves when
my daughter takes it for a walk! As for the spirit of the poor girl– and her
doll—I can only pray that she is at peace.
I also wonder why there is no requirement to tell people about a
house’s history. Had we known what had happened, we may not have bought the
house. Having said that, I believe that the spirits that bother us can be
controlled and that they can find peace. So I suppose that, in the end, it
doesn’t really matter.
No wonder the house was so cheap!

0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home