One
of my early experiences with the paranormal came from visiting a ghost
town in the northwestern USA while on vacation. Now, you’d expect a
ghost town to come with the prerequisite residual hauntings or at least a
spooky outhouse. This town of Garnet, Montana had its share of rundown
buildings as it nestled in a wee valley in the mountains. A gold mining
town, it once held the riches of the mountain in its palm and miners
flocked to pluck it from between the fingers of the hillside. It grew
fat and rich for a time but when the gold ran out, so did the miners,
leaving behind a hotel, a general store, small houses and large pockets
dug into the nearby hills (plus the aforementioned spooky outhouses).
My
family wandered through what was left of the town, along with other
curious tourists, trying to get a sense of what it was like in its
heyday. Imagining dirty, desperate men coming from inside a mountain
wasn’t difficult, what remained of their cabins told the story better
than any signage the BLM had provided. Ruined furniture, rusted pans
left scattered about filthy cabins and the feeling of failure permeated
the broken walls of the houses, why wouldn’t there be a haunting? It
seemed as if that was all there ever was here.
I
entered the hotel slowly. Once there was grandeur of sorts, now it
looked like a woman ruined by too many men and not enough self-respect.
Plaster flaked from the walls and heavy tables stood in the middle of
the first floor dining room, looking strangely proud of weathering time
and being able to show off their wounds left by drunken gunshots and the
flying glass of old arguments. I followed my family upstairs to see the
rooms. Plexiglas partitioned them off so you could peer inside but not
enter. In some of the rooms, the windows were left bare, sunshine
squeaked in through the dirty glass and fell onto beds salvaged from the
hotel and covered with old quilts. In others, the windows were covered,
dusty light shone through the boards that swallowed the glass. These
rooms held what seemed to be 100-year-old garbage. It covered the floors
and rose up the walls, it smelled like decay and made you want to turn
away. I, naturally, couldn’t.
As
I got closer, my heart started to beat louder in my ears and my nose
started to twitch. I felt lightheaded and wanted to run. I poked my head
into the room and at once felt something rushing towards me. I am not
particularly psychic, just enough to know when to get the heck out of a
place. If I could describe it, I’d say it was pain, screaming and
confusion coming at me all at once. I backed away quickly and my
investigational gene kicked in. I checked out the other rooms to see if I
experienced any similar occurrences and casually asked my husband if he
had seen anything out of the ordinary. This man is as intuitive as a
brick. “Nothing that a Dustbuster couldn’t help…” he replied.
I
knew what I had felt was unusual; I tested it again before we left the
building. Again, my heart raced and my nose tingled but this time there
was no attack of emotion towards me. I could feel that it sat huddled in
the corner, amidst the rubbish and filth, and watched as I moved out of
sight and down the stairs, escaping into the light.
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