Authors: Cathy MacPhail
The glass was still moving faster and faster round the table, spelling out its message again. And then again.
HELP ME, TYLER.
I remembered the words I had heard in my head, surely only in my head, the night the clock stopped â the night he had visited me in my room.
Help me, Tyler,
he had whispered.
âBut who are you?' I shouted as if it could hear me. And I knew the answer even before the glass began to move again. I knew the name it would spell out. B ⦠E ⦠N.
âBen Kincaid.' Jazz's voice seemed to come from far away. I couldn't take my eyes off that glass. Faster and faster it raced round the table, touching the K, then the I, flying to the square marked N. Then round the table and almost sending the square marked C fluttering to the floor. Jazz's finger fell from the tumbler, then Mac's, until the only finger on it was my own. Then even I couldn't hold it. It flew over the edge and smashed to the ground on Jazz's tiled dining-room floor.
HELP ME, TYLER.
A plea from Ben Kincaid from beyond the grave.
But how could I possibly help him? He was dead!
Mac still thought I'd pushed it. âFunny your finger was the only one left on the glass,' he said afterwards.
âI didn't push it!' I yelled it at him, wishing he could understand how scared I was. Jazz understood. She seemed to be revelling in the whole thing.
âWhy would she push it?' Jazz asked him.
âMaybe she wants to be famous for five minutes. Or in her case a little longer. She did the same in her last school. Telling people she saw a dead teacher. Making things up.' He spat the words out as if they disgusted him.
âThat's why I think Tyler is a psychic,' Jazz insisted. âThis has happened to her before.'
Mac turned away in disgust. âAw come on, Jazz.'
Jazz pulled him round to face her again. âYou know she didn't push that tumbler, Mac. You saw her face â¦
look at her face now.'
Mac did, stared at me, and then looked away quickly. âShe's a good actress.'
I'd had enough of him. âStop talking about me as if I'm not here. I didn't push that glass. I don't understand what's happening either.'
But I'd never convince Mac.
Jazz pushed him and Adam into the kitchen for more cheesecake. Then she sat me down on the sofa and said very seriously, âI think I've figured out how Ben Kincaid wants you to help him.' She spoke as if she was an expert in the paranormal. âHe needs you to help him get to the other side.'
I heard a spluttered giggle from the kitchen. The boys at the kitchen door, mouths full of cheesecake, obviously listening.
âThe other side of what?' I asked her.
âHe's trapped here, in this world. He can't move on. Something's keeping him here and he needs you to help him.'
âSo what's keeping him here ⦠and why does it have to be me?'
Jazz shrugged. âBecause you're psychic. You came to the school and you're psychic. He's never been able to
get through to anyone before, but he can get through to you. And he'll let you know how to help him.'
But I didn't want him to let me know. The thought of it freaked me out. Yet, in a way, she was right. Ben Kincaid wasn't going to let me go.
Dad picked me up bang on ten o'clock. âHave a nice time?' he asked.
I nodded. But I hadn't had a nice time. I was scared. How was I supposed to help a dead boy get to the other side?
âI'm so glad I wasn't there,' Aisha said next morning. She was waiting for me at the school gate. I was glad of her company, didn't fancy walking up the long drive past the lake on my own this morning. âJazz phoned me. Told me all about it.'
âI don't believe any of it,' I said, wanting it to be true.
âNeither do I. One of the boys was pushing it, don't worry about it.' She squeezed my arm. âJazz loves things like this, she'll just wind you up. That's why I didn't want her to do it.'
It made me feel better, for a while anyway.
The bell rang, and I began to hurry towards the classroom. Aisha was held back by Callum, but I moved on
ahead of the others, none of them in any hurry to get to our class. Mac was holding forth about something. I nudged past him. I was first into the classroom ⦠or I thought I was. I stepped in, and there, sitting in the seat at the back where I had always seen him, was the boy with the pale face, the dark eyes.
Ben Kincaid.
I leapt back out, stumbling into Mac, and Callum and Adam. âHe's there,' I said, breathless. I clutched at Callum's jacket. âBen Kincaid. He's sitting at the back.'
âI don't believe you,' Mac said, pushing me aside. Jazz was right with him.
âIt's him,' I said.
They stepped into the classroom.
Please let them see him,
I prayed.
Please let them say they see him.
Mac turned back to me. He took a deep breath. âShe's right. He's there,' he said.
At last,
I thought,
someone else sees what I can see.
And I was so glad that someone was Mac. Then his hand encircled my arm and he pulled me gently towards him, into the classroom. I didn't want to look again, but I had to.
âThere you go,' Mac said. âBen Kincaid. Large as life.'
I could hardly bear to open my eyes. I only peered through my lashes. I saw the dark hair, the same pale
face, the boy sitting at the back of the class watching me.
âIt's him,' I mumbled. And I turned away again.
They all crowded into the doorway behind me. There was a cold silence. I felt Jazz touch my arm gently. âTyler ⦠look again.'
I dared another look. My eyes wide this time. The boy sitting at the back of the class stared back. He called out. âWhat are you lot staring at?' His voice was cheeky. I saw then (how could I not have noticed it before?) his hair was not so dark, his face was not so pale. It was Sam Petrie.
He definitely wasn't Ben Kincaid.
âBut I thought ⦠I was sure â¦' How could I have made such a stupid mistake?
Mac smirked. âTold you it would work,' he said to no one in particular.
And I realised then he'd been responsible. He'd held the others back deliberately. He'd made sure Sam Petrie was sitting in that seat, made sure that I would be the first into the class. He wanted to trick me ⦠and it had worked.
I hated him.
I'd blown it. I knew that as soon as I realised that the boy wasn't Ben Kincaid. I had mistaken Sam Petrie for him. Now they thought I'd been mistaken all along. Or lying. Mac's eyes told me that was exactly what he believed. I had made the whole thing up. He had proved it. âHow could you be so rotten?' I asked him.
He shrugged. âIsn't it better to know you were wrong ⦠or would you rather it had been a ghost?'
âIt's an easy mistake to make.' Aisha tried to make me feel better. âSam does look a bit like that photo of Ben Kincaid outside Mr Hyslop's office.'
âSam Petrie doesn't look a bit like that.' Mac spat the words out, and though I hated to say it, he was right. Sam Petrie didn't look at all like Ben Kincaid. But just for a second, when I had first peeked into the classroom, there had been a momentary resemblance.
âI know what's happened,' Callum said. And we all listened, as if he really was the cleverest boy in the school. âTyler, when you were outside the Rector's office that first day ⦠did you look at the photographs on the wall?'
I tried to remember exactly what I'd seen that day. I had stood up and turned to the wall ⦠and, yes, there had been the photograph where no one was smiling. 1979. The one with Father Michael in it and ⦠of course Ben Kincaid must have been there too, though I hadn't noticed him then. At least, I thought I hadn't. I nodded.
âWell, that's it. You've seen the photo of Ben Kincaid. You come into the class and see wee Sam there. There's a passing resemblance. Your subconscious gets the two of them mixed up. Genuine mistake.'
Adam grinned. âHey, listen to Clement Freud here.'
Callum corrected him. âIt's Sigmund Freud actually.
He
was the famous psychiatrist.'
Mac looked disgusted. âSeems Tyler makes a lot of genuine mistakes. A dead teacher in a supermarket queue, a dead boy sitting in the class. Come on!'
I was angry, but I had no answer to that. Jazz was the only one who seemed to believe me. She wanted
desperately for it to be true because she loved ghost stories. Jazz spoke up for me. âI think she did see Ben Kincaid. He appeared to her in class. He came through to her at our seance. He needs her to help him.' She put her arm round my shoulder. âAnd we're going to find out how.'
She was so enjoying the idea of some strange haunting going on. Why couldn't it all be happening to Jazz? I bet she wouldn't be afraid.
But the dreary days passed and nothing else happened. I moved in a dream â a nightmare. I felt sick to my stomach. I walked home every day down the long drive, past the misty lake, past the shops with the newspaper headlines that were all about the missing girl.
And I wondered if anyone at school would want me back if I went missing.
It was our Steven who cheered me up. He passed his driving test, first attempt (we'd never hear the end of that) and he insisted on taking the whole family out for a drive in the car.
âI tell you what,' Dad said, âyou can take us to that little country pub we like. I'll treat us all to a meal, and I can have a beer for a change.'
âAnd for once, it won't be Mum's taxi service. When me and Dad or Tyler go out, Steven can pick us all up,' Mum said.
Steven didn't look too happy about that, but he was desperate to show off his driving skills. Skills might be a bit of an exaggeration. Almost running us into a ditch. Crashing the gears as he went up a hill. And swerving so hard to avoid some daft pheasant standing in the middle of the road he almost had us wrapped round a tree.
âHow did you ever manage to pass?' I asked him after he'd stalled the car for the third time.
âHe must have put a spell on the examiner,' Dad said.
But that night out was just what I needed to take my mind off things. Lift me out of that sombre mood. Mum noticed it too.
âYou've been so withdrawn lately. I've been worried about you,' she said, as we waited for our meal at the pub, and Dad and Steven had a game of snooker. âIt's so good to see you smile again.'
That night I convinced myself it had been Sam Petrie I had seen all along. A boy who looked like Ben Kincaid.
The statues in the school hadn't moved at all â that had been a trick of the light ⦠And the message from the tumbler (I mean, a message from a tumbler! How could I ever take that seriously?) Adam or Mac had been pushing it, of course. And that night in my bedroom? I hadn't seen anything, had I? It had all been imagination or a dream.
Everything had a logical explanation.
And treating it like that seemed to work.
Next day at school, Jazz and Aisha and I had a great time playing netball, and when I told them all about Steven's erratic driving even Mac managed a smile.
I wanted it to stay like this.
It
would
stay like this. I promised myself it would.
But there are some promises you can't keep. Some things you can't stop. And some things you cannot foresee.
It was Friday. I was so looking forward to the weekend. Jazz and I were going to the movies tonight. And then we were having a sleepover, my first sleepover with Jazz, at her house. Aisha said she had other plans.
âSomething's going on there,' Jazz insisted. âAisha miss a sleepover? I think she's got a date with Mac.'
âMac? Who would go out with that miserable so-and-so?'
Aisha was far too nice for him, that's what I was thinking as I hurried to the toilets. Mr O'Hara had excused me, told me to hurry back. The toilets were practically across the corridor from the classroom. I would only be gone for a few minutes.
It was a dark, dismal Friday. The clouds hung low outside the high windows. But I didn't feel dismal, not that day. All that was on my mind was the weekend ahead.
If I hadn't needed to go to the toilet, if I'd stayed in the classroom, it wouldn't have happened ⦠would it?
Or are there things that are meant to be â going to happen no matter what you do?
I was coming out of the girls' toilets when I heard it. A soft, low chanting, rhythmic, almost peaceful. It seemed to weave its way down the gloomy passageways towards me.
I stopped and listened. At first, I thought it was the school choir practising. Not quite singing, and yet more musical than anything I'd ever heard before.
It was a prayer, some ancient, Latin prayer, winding its way towards me from somewhere in the distance. I couldn't move, though I knew I should hurry back to class. I was only steps from the classroom door, could hear Mr O'Hara's voice. Better to ignore that chant, I told myself. But I couldn't stop listening. The chant was so beautiful, so soothing and hypnotic.
I couldn't stop myself. Instead of heading back to my class, so close that I could almost reach out and touch the door handle, I turned and followed the sound.
I wasn't afraid. What was there to be afraid of from anything so beautiful?
The school was so silent. I heard a teacher shout
angrily from one of the classrooms, heard my feet tapping on the tiled floor. But otherwise there was no other sound. Just that chanting prayer. So musical, and yet not quite music.
This was no school choir, no choir of young voices either. I could imagine row upon row of black-clad monks, their hoods covering their faces, their hands locked in prayer, murmuring that beautiful prayer.
There was a statue against the wall. I looked up, and his face was turned towards the sound of the chanting too. Surely, he had always had his head bent in prayer?