Wednesday, October 19, 2022

The house upon the hill...

 

Two young lads decide to check out the spooky looking house not far from their homes..

but maybe they got more than they bargained for. 'The house upon the hill'...it's chapter 

number two in Tales Unleashed and is here for your inspection...step up and take a look. 


The House Upon the Hill

Our town of twelve hundred people had a resident that was more than just a bit unusual. The “lady who lived on the hill” – as she was known, never by her given name – was rarely seen during the light of day, preferring to go out early in the evening, strolling down the road to the little grocery store about a half mile from where she lived. Sometimes she would ride her old bicycle, the original tires patched and re-patched from the years of riding up and down the cinder roadway. Indeed, Beatrice McGee was a strange and lonely lady. No one could remember a day when she did not live alone in that house on the hill. Rumor had it that her husband had been lost at sea some fifty years ago, and she took refuge in this lonely country house that would be far removed from the dark and murky New England coast which had claimed him.

And here it was, Halloween eve, young Tommy and Joe in their ever-increasing curiosity to get a closer look at the old woman, inched their way through the briars and brambles leading to her place . . . trying to get close enough to peek through a downstairs window on her front porch. The house was usually dark, with perhaps one light in the second floor to keep out the bats, and a dim light on the first floor. The night air started to settle in quickly now as a half moon brought more light to the scene just in front of the boys.

“Tell me again why we are doing this?” asked Tommy. Joe replied, “You’ve heard the rumors Tommy… everyone in town says she has about twenty cats.. and they’re all dead, stuffed and in different spots all around her . . . I’ve got to see for myself.”

Before Joe could respond, Tommy crouched lower and headed out to cover the last fifty yards to the front of the house. Joe wanted to be somewhere else at this point . . . anywhere else. He had hung out with Tommy through some weird adventures, but this one was going to take the cake, and if they got caught . . . boy, would things be bad at home for both of them.

Beatrice had no phone or television. The boys had heard that she would listen to the radio at night, pop some popcorn and then retire sometime before midnight. It was now just eight p.m., and with any luck at all, Tommy and Joe would have a real close look at the ole’ recluse and see for themselves what the town’s people had talked about for years.

Finally, the two boys had made it to the porch. Both on their hands and knees, they paused, trying to catch their breaths and straining to hear anything from inside the house.

The faint light of the one bulb which was lit filtered out through the dirty window and faded curtain, and onto the weathered boards where the boys sat.

“Hear that?” Tommy said, grabbing Joe’s arm to get his attention. “She’s got the radio on for sure.”

Joe leaned over closer to Tommy’s left ear and said quietly, “I want to go home . . . come on Tommy, I don’t care about seeing any dead cats and this place is just too creepy.”

Just as Tommy was ready to respond, they heard a rush of air and boards scraping boards as the bottom window was thrown up and a voice shrieked out, “What do you young-uns want? Come to visit my dead cats did you?” What followed was a foul, high pitched laugh that made both Joe and Tommy jump from the porch with legs and feet struggling to get traction below them. Within seconds they were ten, fifteen, twenty yards away . . . Beatrice was still laughing from the open window . . . and yelled to the pair as they made their way down the hill, “What’s the matter . . . cat got your tongues?” The question was followed by a screech that followed the pair as they raced homeward, Joe losing his baseball hat as he ran, with Tommy in the lead by a good five yards.

Two minutes had passed and the pair, totally spent, stopped at the bottom of the hill, both out of breath and shaking profusely.

“Next time you want to do something stupid, count me out,” Joe said.

“Ah, shut up,” Tommy responded, and the two started the final two-minute walk back to town.

Back at the top of the hill, Beatrice settled into her favorite antique rocking chair, and grabbed a coffee jar filled with popcorn she had made days before. Except for the sound of the rocker pushing down on loose boards of the old house, the house was still. The radio playing lightly on the mantle . . . the cats, placed here and there, all in their respective spots, their glazed eyes piercing the cobwebs and dust, transfixed on Beatrice their keeper.

As Beatrice rocked and smiled, she announced to her pets, “Tomorrow is Halloween my sweeties . . . do you think our two little friends will return?”

“We shall see, we shall see.”

Tommy and Joe didn’t return the next night, Halloween. But they planned on going back on a Saturday afternoon, when the sun would be high, and the shadows not so frightful. But it was not to be.

Three weeks after their night on the porch under the screech of Beatrice, an overnight fire burned down the house on the hill and everything that was in it, including Beatrice and her beloved collection.

The next day after the fire, as Tommy and Joe sat on a slope nearby looking across the way to the destroyed house, Tommy remarked, “I guess we’ll never know . . . about the cats, that is.”

“Oh I know,” replied Joe. “It was too strange of a story not to be true . . . just too strange not to be true.”

Friday, October 7, 2022

A must visit for your future travels...

 


 My how the months fly by don't they? This is a re-post of my original 

 visit to the grave site of Twilight Zone creator Rod Serling in Interlaken, N.Y.

A year later, my brother Gary accompanied me on my 2nd trip there. 

It was an easy drive .....it was an hour and a half from where I live in 

Cohocton, N.Y.  If you were a Twilight Zone fan...this trip has to be 

on your 'bucket list' of places to go....it is simply awe inspiring...and 

I must admit, just a bit spooky.  I hope you enjoy the story and the pics...

Visiting Rod Serling.....



I'd been planning the trip for sometime now...an hour and one half from Loon
Lake here in Cohocton....but the drive was well worth the discovery.

Rod Serling's grave site in Interlaken, N.Y.  was an experience, let me tell you.

When I was a mile out, the anticipation grew, I was hoping I would not have
difficulty finding the spot, but the map I had spelled out the location pretty
well.

Driving thru the gate and meandering thru to section G reminded me of many
funerals I have had over the years....the quiet, the peaceful surroundings...
being anxious to get to the right place.  The last turn to section G where he
is buried had some pretty good washouts, but my car handled them easily,
and I pulled over and parked. Grabbing my camera and tripod, I headed up
the slight incline to where the map indicated where he rested....

I found rows of markers with death dates of the 90s', then the 80's...then
I hit the 70's and I knew I was very very close.  Within thirty feet, a grave
that looked a little 'busy' with things around the stone jumped out at me.

As I walked up to the the grave, I was actually overwhelmed.  Here he was.
Rod Serling, master of the short story, creator of the world famous
Twilight Zone, followed by Night Gallery. Wow. I was finally here.

I had followed him and Alfred Hitchcock for years...enjoying their stories
and most of all, their surprise endings to their stories. I have mentioned both
writers on the back cover of my new book Tales Unleashed coming out this
fall. 

As I knelt down to inspect Rod's simple 12 by 24 grave marker...I could tell
that he has not been forgotten. Many who traveled here before me left little
tokens, coins, photographs of Rod.  It's so pleasurable to know that others
have made the journey here before me... just to experience this guy and
the talent that he had. But what a short life, just 50. How much more could
he have written if he had lived to 70, 80 and beyond?

A flag also was present..he served in the Army, WW2. He had received
several medals during service in the Pacific. 

So in the quiet, I sat my tripod, took some photos, spoke a few words to
this man, thanking him for his stories, in inspirations, and for his service
to the country. 
Wikipedia has an excellent long biography of Rod. You should go there
sometime and read it. He had many





many talents indeed.

As you know, Serling was a big smoker...the following explained that
and his death:

Serling was said to smoke 3-4 packs of cigarettes a day. On May 3, 1975, he had a minor heart attack and was hospitalized. He spent two weeks at Tompkins County Community Hospital before being released. A second heart attack two weeks later forced doctors to agree that open-heart surgery, though considered risky at the time, was in order. The ten-hour-long procedure was performed on June 26, but Serling had a third heart attack on the operating table and died two days later at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, New York. He was 50 years old. His funeral and burial took place on July 2 at Lake View Cemetery, Interlaken, (Seneca County), New York.


His grave site is easy to find, and is lot G, plot 1044. He has a simple 12” by 24” headstone.
Contributing factors to his early death included the fact that he was a very heavy smoker,
his favorite being Chesterfield ‘long’ cigarettes. He endorsed the brand and was rarely seen

without a cigarette in his hand, even while introducing some of his TV episodes. 

I wasn't at his grave site too awfully long. I almost felt like an intruder into this
space, a quiet and serene place....you could here a pin drop. 
Thanks Rod. Perhaps I'll go back there another day. If you find yourself in the
Fingerlakes of New York, direct your car to that gate. It's a place that is indeed
where your imagination can abound, where time itself slows to a halt...it's
a place where the Twilight Zone has come to rest. SS