Malcolm opted for a nice chocolate pancake, with caramel syrup and chocolate chips on top. Candace, on the other hand, stayed with the traditional dough and cookie syrup.
"You have chosen very well. I've never seen this syrup, and although I love cookies, I was afraid I wouldn't like it. I hate choosing the wrong food." He commented, which made Candace's eyes light up, as this was something she herself used to talk about all the time.
"So you did well. Even so it tastes special, it is a bit too sweet. I may think it's wonderful and you, sir, don't. If you want to try it..." She said.
"Please, 'sir', no! I'm past thirty, but I still don't look that old. Do I?"
Candace's mouth dropped open. She didn't mean to be rude!
"I swore you were younger." She commented.
"For real? I'm thirty-one years old now. And you must be kidding me. You even called me 'sir'." He said, lifting his chin and pretending to be offended.
"Why, si-" she stopped and corrected herself, "you, even at thirty, are still older than I am. Plus, we're not close. How could I not show respect and just call you informaly?" She questioned, which made him cross his arms and look at her seriously.
"I'll let this one go. But just this once! We're ordering pancakes, and clearly I can't sulk over pancakes."
"I fully agree!" They laughed and Jacqueline came bringing their food.
"Bon appetit!" She walked away, happily.
They started eating in silence, just enjoying the food. Candace didn't like to eat and talk at the same time. She only did this if the food was really bad, otherwise she considered it disrespectful. At least that's how her grandmother taught her.
Once they were done, Malcolm didn't ask for the check, as he wanted to talk to the pretty girl in the pink pajamas in fron of him.
"Now that we're properly fed, tell me, what's the crime of the poor phone?" He placed the napkin on the table and waited for her to start talking.
"Well, it's a crazy thing. You'll probably walk out of here thinking I'm insane." She answered, smiling awkwardly and looking down, before looking up at him.
"Maybe not. In these years of life I've had my share of strange events, so maybe I'll understand it. Come on, tell me." He offered her a beautiful smile, one she thought was irresistible.
"OK. Ah... I work in a nursing home, you know? Yesterday was one of my shifts and a gentleman who's been there for years said something in a weird way and since then I think I've been kind of haunted by it."
"What did he say?" Malcolm was frowning very seriously and interested, but Candace wasn't looking at him and therefore didn't notice it.
"He said 'it's time'. It didn't make any sense to me. Then I got home, and I had some hallucinations. I saw broken things that were actually normal, I saw my floor all wet when it was dry and the damn phone... Someone called me and kept repeating Mr. Stanton's phrase, and as I had a rough night, probably because of tiredness, I ended up terrified and broke the phone. I went back to sleep and woke up to the remains of the phone ringing. I couldn't take it and decided to throw the phone away. It wasn't even connected to the line!" She finished speaking and realized how surreal what she reported was. A phone ringing with no line on? Seeing things changing; dry and wet floors? She was lucky the man was still there, and not running out the door.
"Mr. Stanton?" Malcolm's eyes gleamed strangely, and again, Candace wasn't looking. When she turned her attention to him, he had already composed himself.
"Yes, the old man who said the phrase that stuck in my mind. He has been in a nursing home for a few years now. I think he's the oldest resident there. Since the sixties, I guess."
"I understand it. Seems like you dreamed a lot last night. As you said, you were tired. And now, will you run out of phones? How am I going to call you?" He asked, placing both hands on the table next to hers.
Candace turned super red with embarrassment. Was he really flirting with her? Was that how it happened? But wasn't he too old for her? She was twenty-three, while he was thirty-one.
"I will buy one soon." She said, a little shy.
"If you want, we can set a date and we will go together. I have to go downtown to buy some items, later. I'm moving here and my house is still half empty." He gave a little laugh. "The trouble of being single."
"Oh, well, I'm off today and there's still time to go over there. In my kind of work, I cannot be incommunicable." She shrugged, for really, having a phone was a requirement of her job. If they needed her to cover someone's shift, for example, how would they go about letting her know? The time when staff went to the nurse/sdoctors home to pick them up was long gone.
"Then it's settled. We can go right now, if you want."
"Yes, of course." She was still kind of dizzy. In fact, what she really wanted was to go home. But at the same time, she didn't want to part from him. What if she continued to have the hallucinations from before? Taking a walk and breathing some fresh air might be just what she needed.
"Let's go then. Today it's on me, and next time, we'll see." He said, taking his wallet out of his pocket and signaling to Jacqueline.
"No way. I'll pay for my pancakes!" She didn't like anyone paying her anything. And according to her grandmother, when you let a man pay you something, before you have any relationship, it's like letting him pay for you.
"We are in the eighties. I'm not buying you, Candace." He said and raised an eyebrow. She was a little uncomfortable, but relented.
"Next time, I'll pay and there's no argument." She decided, making it clear that this was immutable. He raised his hands, in surrender.
After shopping, Malcoln took Candace back to her apartment. There, they bump into Karen, who greeted them. Karen didn't like Malcoln very much. Something about him seemed a bit false. She was hardly wrong when she had these hunches, and that's why she was worried about Candace. Back at the apartment, Candace looked around herself, scanning everything she could find there to see if there was anything odd. But apparently, everything was in its place. She took the bag with the new phone and went to plug it in. As soon as she was done, she went to the bathroom. On her way out, while drying her hair, she heard the phone ringing. She took a deep breath and took the phone off the hook. "Hello?" She said, with some trepidation. "Candace? Thank God! We've been calling you for at least two hours!" Mildred Summers. The reception and administration nurse. "Oh, it's just that I didn't have a phone. I got a little sick and ended up just going out to buy another one in the afternoon." Candace exp
Candace dropped the tray of medications on the floor, scattering the pills across the everywhere. She opened her mouth to scream, but no matter how hard she tried, no sound came out. Joseph continued to stare at her with only one eye in place, and a lunatic laugh escaped his mouth, getting louder and louder. When her legs finally came back to life, she rushed to the door and desperately opened it. "Help! Help!" She screamed and, quickly, Scott appeared there, startled. She was running, looking back, towards Staton's room and ended up being hugged by Scott, after she bumped into him, who stopped and toke her by the shoulders. "What happened??" He asked and, seeing that she didn't say anything coherent, he shook her and she finally mumbled something. "His eye is no longer there. B-bleeding." Scott let go of Candace and ran to Room 647. He saw both the tray and the medicine on the floor, but Joseph Staton was in bed, sleeping peacefuly. How the old man didn't wake up to all that scream
Candace went to the patient's room and found him lying down, peacefully sleeping. She met with Scott before entering and asked him to allow her in, to which he very reluctantly agreed. She watched the old man sleep for a few minutes. What happened to her to have such a hallucination? Could it be that she had a problem at her house, with fungi? But, she started having strange sensations inside work that night, so the fungus wouldn't be in her house, exactly. With these thoughts, she didn't notice when Joseph woke up, until he called out her name. "Miss Adams?" He was lying still, just looking at her. "Huh?" She looked around, waking up from her reverie. She stared at him. He motioned with his finger for her to approach him. She did so. "I need your help." He said softly, looking around, still lying down. "With what, Mr Staton? Want me to call Scott?" Joseph made a frump. He didn't like that nurse guy because he was too rough. And he knew the guy had bad intentions towards Candace. H
Joseph bent down and picked up the small box, about the size of a hand and about three fingers wide. He went to the old chair and sat down, listening to the poor furniture creak. Before opening it, Joseph noticed how it had some symbols carved into the lid as well as on the sides. Joseph's grandmother was a native, from the Pine Ridge Reservation, and though she avoided talking about it much, he could make out some of those carvings. He lifted the lid and saw a few items inside, and one of them caught his eyes. The braided leather key ring his father showed him a few years ago. They were very similar, but Joseph knew they couldn't be the same, after all, how could that be possible? There was also a necklace with a pendant similar to an animal's tooth, as well as a red ribbon. Suddenly, tiredness sets in and Joseph feels heavy eyes again, as when he was driving. He looked at the dusty bed and thought there was no other way. He dusted it off and, before going to 'bed', he observed throu
The walk to the cabin, though less tortuous than the previous night, was longer. Joseph noticed some things hanging from trees, and when he looked closer, for it was day and he could see, he realized that they were small skulls. He was startled, because that was very macabre! There were many, like bunches of grapes. He kept walking, because the worst that could happen to him was to be stuck out in the open, in the blizzard.He saw some totem poles half buried in the snow around the house. When he finally looked at the building, he realized that it looked a lot like last night's cabin. He swallowed, slowly approaching the door. He raised his hand to knock, but it froze for a few seconds. He closed his eyes, took a deep breath, and before he knocked, he looked down and sees the same potted plant."It's not possible..." His lips were trembling, not from the cold, but from fear. He gatherd courage and knocked on the d
Joseph was dizzy after realizing that this woman, the Indian, was his great aunt. She was hardly mentioned, but he knew her name was Winona. He heard about how mad she was and that they cut contact with her because of this. Now he knew she cast a curse on his parents, as well as on his uncles, and maybe that's why so many wrong things happened in their lives. Joseph's mother freaked out one fine day, while cooking and tried to kill his father. His father wanted to put his wife into a nursing home, but at the time they didn't have resources for that, so the solution was to take care of her in their own home. Unfortunately, it ended in tragedy. She set the whole house on fire one night, with everyone asleep. Fortunately, his father managed to get him out of there, but not her, who burned to death. Outside the house, while waiting for the firefighters ,they could hear her insane laughter. Before the outbreak, she couldn't stop talking about curses and talismans and poisoned blood, and i
Darkness engulfed Joseph, who felt his feet leave the ground. The scene of Harry falling continued to play through his mind, like an infinite loop. Winona's laughter rang in his ears. He just wanted this nightmare to end soon and be nothing more than this: a nightmare.'I must be very tired and I'm just hallucinating. That's it. None of this is real!' he repeated to himself, eyes closed and covering his ears to try to stifle that hideous laugh.As soon as his feet touched the ground again, Joseph opened his eyes. He looked around and, once again, he was in that cursed cabin. He got up, staggering, and headed for the door. Incredibly, it opened without objection, allowing him to leave.Joseph ran back to the road, where the car was parked on the side of the road. The snow wasn't as fluffy as before and he didn't get stuck like he thought he would.He took the key out of his pocket, and his trembling fingers had a hard time getting the small metal object and inserting it into the lock o
Candace was outside the room 647, unable to mutter a word. Her eyes were focussed on the white wall in front of her. A little red stain was there. Almost invisible. ‘Is it blood?’, Candace asked herself. Mildred was taking care of all the arrangements, including having to talk to Joseph's family and, of course, dealing with the police. "Darling, take it." The smoke from the hot coffee made Candace look at the small Styrofoam cup, filled with the steaming liquid, and then at the woman holding it. The blue eyes behind the glasses expressed both empathy and concern. Candace didn't say anything, just held the cup, while Mildred smiled at her and walked away. She had a lot to do. When Mildred returned, the cup was still in Candace's hand, and the coffee was very cold. Mildred took a deep breath. She had been working at the hospital for some time and was used to the occasional patient passing away, especially since most of them were elderly. Many of them with some illness, not only ment