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Haunted Blog Hop – Part V – THE END

October 31, 2013 By Talya Tate Boerner

Welcome to the Haunted Blog Hop, a spooky story told in parts by a group of blogger friends. The story began Sunday and concludes today. If you haven’t been following along and need to catch up, click the links below to read each blogger’s part of the story in order. (Unless of course you are one of those people who likes to read the ending of a book first…)

No one had any idea where the story would go. Each person picked up where the prior writer left off. Fun!

Part I (Oct 27) desperately seeking {gina} 

Part II (Oct 28) Minivan Momma

Part III (Oct 29) All That And Some Other Stuff

Part IV (Oct 30) littlerockmamas.com

Part V (Halloween) Me! 

AND NOW, read on for the conclusion of Gillian’s mysterious night at the Rutledge Home for Wayward Boys…

The composition was unmistakable.
Swan Lake.
Gillian was momentarily swept away by the recognizable score, an infectious mix of mystery and magic that seemed to ooze through the very walls as though the heart of the cottage pulsed around her. And then she heard weeping mingled with the music.
Serena?
Shoving the locket deep into her coat pocket, she felt her way back along the hallway searching for an explanation for the strange circumstance. The dim glow of candlelight cast just enough light to reflect her dusty footprints left only moments earlier. 
With each step, the sobbing grew louder. 
“Serena? Are you here?” Gillian whispered. 
The crying stopped.
“Serena, it’s me, Gillian.”
Gillian’s heartbeat quickened as she stood at the closed door off the landing. This door was the only thing separating her from answers. Separating her from Serena? The glass doorknob seemed to vibrate with the swell of music. It easily turned in her palm. 
In the far corner underneath a dormer window stood the only furniture in the room—a drop leaf side table. And on top, a turntable spun a vinyl album. Gillian reminded herself to breathe, then walked into the room for a closer look. 

The turntable had no arm or obvious source of power, yet from it blared the evocative sounds of Serena’s final performance before darkness claimed her… But how was this possible?
As Gillian struggled to make sense of the situation, movement beyond the window caught her eye. People. Boys. Boys dressed in elaborate costumes masqueraded ghost-like through the woods toward the lake. They hummed and chanted carrying flags and banners and wooden oars above their heads. The wayward boys?
Gillian rushed from the room, and peered over the banister. Below, the downstairs was cavelike. Behind her, the music of Swan Lake continued playing, only now it was louder, clearer, more urgent than before.
I must talk to those boys. There has to be a logical explanation.
Gillian hurried down the stairs but sensed a presence move past her ruffling the air and extinguishing her candle. She nearly stumbled as the candle slipped from her hand, rolled down the stairs and bounced into the shadows.
Tap, tap, tap, tap.
The typewriter keys pounded.
       
Another message? 

She didn’t pause to find out.
            
Tap, tap, tap, tap…
The smell of tobacco seized her stomach, and she swallowed sour vomit. The floor and ceiling whirled as blackness consumed Gillian. When the door swung open and the past floated out, Gillian didn’t notice. She lay crumpled on the floor.

******
           
“Gillian, Gillian. Wake up!” A blurry figure knelt beside her, his voice distorted. “Gillian, are you okay? It’s me.”

“Ethan!” She clutched her boyfriend’s arm and stammered and stuttered, her words doused with a rare display of tears…”I know the family secret…my dad’s sister…Swan Lake played but the record player was broken… the tobacco… and the boys outside—did you see the boys outside?”

Ethan stared.

She continued. “Serena was here… I heard her crying…and that typewriter over there—it types by itself!” She pointed across the room with a trembling arm.
           
“What typewriter?” Ethan’s gaze followed the wave of her hand across the room. The sofa and chairs were covered with mismatched sheets. Faded gold curtains drooped along the two large windows. A sizable walnut desk seemed to prop up the far wall, but there was no typewriter. Instead, a purple potted mum rested in the center of the desk, the only bright spot in the room.

“But there was a typewriter. I swear.” Gillian rubbed her eyes. “And that flower…? No.”

“Babe, I think you hit your head. The sidewalk’s wet and there was even sleet during the night. You must have slipped when you came into the house. I worried when you didn’t answer your cell phone, so I drove out as soon as I got back into town. I still can’t believe you came out here in bad weather. And in those shoes…” She glanced at her three-inch heels, amazed they were still on her feet.
            
“But the music? I heard music.” Gillian began to shake.
           
“Gillian, listen to me. You were dreaming.”
            
Gillian felt weak and confused and a bit embarrassed. Was it only her imagination? Or a horrible nightmare? She scanned the room for any evidence. She strained to hear Swan Lakebut only heard the sound of a dog’s distant howl.
           
Ethan held her steady and helped her walk toward his truck. “We’ll come back and get your car later.”
            
Gillian nodded.

Dawn began to spread above the tree line. She glimpsed the lake beyond the woods and thought she saw movement but dismissed the notion.

“Hey where’d you get that? I’ve never seen it before.” Ethan touched her neck running his finger along the thin gold chain. “It’s cool, I like it.”

Gillian’s hand jumped to the pendant hanging around her neck. The ballerina etched into the locket appeared to pirouette.

THE END…    
talya

Grace Grits and Gardening
Farm. Food. Garden. Life.
    Thanks to desperately seeking {gina} for coordinating this Haunted Blog Hop!                    
Musical Pairing:

Swan Lake, Odette’s Dance, Gillian Murphy

It’s The Great Pumpkin!

October 30, 2013 By Talya Tate Boerner

wordless wednesday (almost)

Munger Place Great Pumpkin!
“Each year, the Great Pumpkin rises out of the pumpkin patch that he thinks is the most sincere. He’s gotta pick this one. He’s got to. I don’t see how a pumpkin patch can be more sincere than this one.” –  Charles M. Schulz, It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown
 
Sam and Andrew’s house! (across the street from us)
Happy Halloween Eve,
talya
Grace Grits and Gardening
Farm. Food. Garden. Life.
 Musical Pairing:
It’s The Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown

I was a Mexican for Halloween

October 28, 2013 By Talya Tate Boerner

When we were kids, my sister and I rummaged through our closet and put together Halloween outfits from our regular clothes. Sometimes we used hats and belts and strings of beads from Momma’s closet. Or we made accessories from construction paper and grocery sacks. That was how Halloween worked before Party City and Wal-Mart and twenty-four hour on-line shopping. Other than plastic masks at Sterling’s, there were no elaborate costume choices.

In first grade, Momma got creative and sewed handmade costumes. The scariest thing about my witch costume was the heavy-handed eyebrow makeup. My sister/cat rode along on my broom and stole the show. As usual.

Vintage Witch and Cat Halloween Costume Grace Grits and Gardening
One year I was a free-spirited gypsy with flowing purple skirt and jangly jewelry. Since Mammaw Tate sold Avon to the mysterious clan of gypsies who periodically lived on the edge of Osceola, I knew exactly how they dressed.

Another year I was a hobo. This was a simple (lazy) look requiring only my too-short jeans and a kerchief tied to a stick that fell from the cottonwood tree in the back yard. 
The year I went as a Mexican, I won second place in the Keiser Halloween mini-parade. This costume was one of my favorites repeated several years in a row the way today’s little princesses rock the pink tutu and sparkly crown year after year after year. For this costume I donned a real sombrero and draped a colorful woven blanket over my shoulders. And as the final touch, I carried Momma’s ukulele and sang Aihh-yi-yi-yi in my best Ricky Ricardo voice.

ukulele - I was a Mexican for Halloween

Yes, Momma plays the ukulele. Sorta.

In no way was this Halloween costume meant to be a politically incorrect slam. I was in complete awe of the farm labor who came from South Texas each summer to chop cotton. They traveled to Arkansas in a large convoy, with the entire extended family in tow.

While on our farm, they cooked platters of tamales wrapped in corn husks and sweets made from caramelized sugar. They brought giant bags of juicy grapefruits and sweet onions from The Valley, a magical Neverland near the Rio Grande. I longed to see it…someday…

When their work was done and our fields were free of Johnsongrass, they packed up and traveled to Michigan for new adventures picking tomatoes. The Mexicans worked and played and journeyed as one cohesive group and were not forced to sit in one flat delta field for all of eternity.

They were as free-spirited as those gypsies on the edge of town.

I wanted to be a Mexican when I grew up. Until, of course, that summer Daddy made us chop cotton with them…

That’s a whole other story.

What was your favorite childhood costume?

talya

Grace Grits and Gardening
Farm. Food. Garden. Life.

P.S. Somewhere buried in the BAT CAVE lies a picture of me in my Mexican costume. When I find it, I will share… (If you are unfamiliar with the Bat Cave, click HERE.)

Musical Pairing:

ZZ Top, Just Got Paid

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Hi! I'm Talya Tate Boerner. Writer, Reader, Arkansas Master Naturalist / Master Gardener, Author of

THE ACCIDENTAL SALVATION OF GRACIE LEE (2016)

GENE, EVERYWHERE: a life-changing visit from my father-in-law (2020)

BERNICE RUNS AWAY (2022)

THE THIRD ACT OF THEO GRUENE (coming 2025)

Recent Ramblings:

  • Sunday Letter: 11.23.25
  • Maggie and Miss Ladybug: My New Children’s Nature Book
  • Sunday Letter: November 9, 2025
  • Sunday Letter: Oct 26, 2025
  • Sunday Letter: Oct 5, 2025

Novels:

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