The Haunting of Heather McCollum

The Haunting of Heather McCollum

 

 

 

Happy Autumn, everyone! I love this time of year with its cooler weather and fun holidays like Halloween. I am a relatively average mom of three, wife of one, ovarian cancer ass-kicker, author of Scottish Historical romance, and lover of chai lattes. And since it is close to the spookiest day of the year, I am proud to say that I totally believe in ghosts, mostly because I lived in a haunted house for five years.

Yes, really!

I’m an only child, and my parents divorced when I was nine. My dad moved to Virginia. He loved, and still loves, “fixer uppers” which is why he bought an abandoned house. I first came to see “the mansion” when I was twelve years old. The grass around the two-story, slate-roofed house stood to my waist.

 

 

 

A sloping wrap-around porch had turned completely gray, and loose boards could swallow your foot. The clapboard paint was peeling but looked like it had once been white. A huge barn sat, its middle sinking like a swayback horse, in the yard. We didn’t go in that first evening because the paperwork hadn’t been signed yet, so I stared at the vacant, dark windows that reminded me of assessing eyes. Yeah, I was spooked, but Dad was so excited about the house and its history that I agreed it was beautiful.  

 

 

The house had been built in three parts, the oldest standing right up against the dirt road winding before it. This part of the house was erected before the American Civil War. It was the manor house of a small plantation, and unlike many others in the area, it hadn’t been burned to the ground because it was used for a short while as a hospital for the soldiers. My dad gleefully showed me a regimental-looking button and old coins that he’d unearthed in the basement.

The first time I stepped into the house I stood stunned, staring at the terrible graffiti that had been painted across the walls by vagrants who’d used the empty house for who knows what. Swastikas and profanity yelled back at me from warped, horse-hair plaster walls. While Dad mowed the foot-tall grass with a hand mower, I was supposed to sweep the floor and wash down the walls so we could paint them. I pushed the broom around in that silent room while the sun set outside. All I could hear was the whir of Dad’s mower as it choked through the grass and the broom bristles scratching the wood floor.

The electricity had yet to be turned on in the house, and as the sun set, I stilled like a panicked bird. Cold enveloped the room. Goosebumps prickled up all over my arms and I felt…anger. No ghostly howls came from the staircase in the hall, no chains shook, no television turned fuzzy (maybe it would have had there been one). But I had the overwhelming feeling that someone or something wanted me to “Get out!”

So I got out, running straight off the porch to my dad and refusing to go back in until he had electricity. Luckily by the time I turned fourteen and moved in with my dad and stepmother, he had electricity and running water and even a room for me. Guess where my bedroom was? In the oldest part of the house, of course.

We seemed to attract stray dogs, so we had five. One small Benji-looking dog was mine. Since I was an only child, and my dad and stepmother left at 5:30 AM and returned home at 7:00 PM, I was alone most of the time. Just me and my dogs and…

It became pretty apparent that something was going on in the house. All of us would hear footsteps going up the worn, wooden stairs that led to the hall just outside my room. We’d hear the unplugged vacuum cleaner rolling on the wood floor at night and find it on the other end of the hall in the morning. The dogs would stare together at a single corner, tipping their heads in unison and whining.

“What? What is it!?” I’d yell, but they never told me. Several times, I woke up in the middle of the night, for no apparent reason, to see my little dog whining at something in the shadowed corner of my room. Then she would jump onto my bed and dive under the covers. I always joined her there until morning.

I had a friend sleep over but didn’t tell her about the weird sounds in the house. I didn’t want to scare her off. We started hearing a rattling sound downstairs after my parents had gone to bed. I told her to stay put. I walked down the dark stairs into the dining room (yes, also in the oldest part of the house).

Silence sat with the moon beams coming through the naked windows, as if waiting for me. Then suddenly all the china plates sitting in the glass hutch began to vibrate in their little stands. Nothing else moved in the room, but all the china quivered, making a ringing noise. I was literally petrified and couldn’t move until it stopped. I ran back upstairs. Throughout the night I kept hearing it, but never again after that night.

Occasionally doors would open on their own, reminding me that we were sharing our home, but there were no more angry feelings. In fact, I began to feel like the ghosts (as we felt there were more than one, not sure why) were looking out for me. Perhaps once they realized we weren’t there to harm the house further, they accepted us.

They certainly didn’t accept one of my boyfriends. Poor Mark. One night we had a fight. I remember him saying “Fine, then I’m leaving.” As Mark strode to the door of the room (old houses seem to have doors on every room), the door, which was standing open about three feet, slammed in his face. Well, now!

After that night, Mark wouldn’t leave my side when he visited. When I had to use the bathroom, he’d stay just outside the door. LOL! One night as he was leaving, very late after my folks were asleep, I stood on the front porch waving. He stopped his car, stared at me with huge eyes and then peeled out of the driveway, his tires spitting gravel. The next day I asked him what the hell he’d been doing as he’d woken my dad.

“Was your dad wearing white and standing on a chair right behind you when I was leaving?”

“Uh, no.”

“That’s why I left. The ghost was watching me leave.”

“And you just left me there?!”

“They like you!” was his defense. Yeah… We aren’t together now.

They did like me. They looked out for me, perhaps even growing attached to me. When I was packing up to go away to college, they were quite unhappy. I had a music box with a porcelain doll holding a miniature bird cage. For two nights before I left for the University of Maine, starting around 2AM, I would wake up to my music box singing and the doll’s coiffed head tipping and tilting on its gears.

Yes, every hour on the hour, those pranksters wound up my music box, and I’d have to listen to it until it wound down. I had already learned to sleep with my head under the pillows from years of freaky night noises. Perfect preparation for dorm life.

The first time I came home from college, the electricity just happened to be off only in MY room. I had been away, living with real people with no ghosts around, for months. When I walked into my totally black room, I felt what I can only call a presence or pressure, like someone was in the corner.

“I’m not used to you anymore. I’m sorry, but you’re scaring me,” I said. “I think you should move on or whatever you need to do to leave this house. I’m going back downstairs, and when I come back in five minutes, I’d really like it if you were gone.” I threw in a “in the name of Jesus Christ,” just in case, and left. When I came back up, the pressure seemed to be gone. The next day my dad found the wire that had mysteriously come undone in the wall. After that Dad said he didn’t really hear anything from our ghosts. The footsteps up the stairs to my room had faded away. Maybe I should hire myself out for exorcisms!

Since then, my dad has sold the house to a lovely young family. They have not heard nor seen anything unusual. I’m glad that the ghosts, perhaps of those soldiers (although I sensed a female at times. I mean, what guy would bother to vacuum?), moved on to wherever their spirits were supposed to go. I will certainly always remember them. They taught me to consider the unusual and strengthened my conviction that there are magical things in this world, if we are willing to open our eyes and “see” them.

 

Have you ever experienced something you can’t explain? I would love to hear about it!

 

Pre-order The Devil of Dunakin Castle, coming November 13th, 2017!

 

Englishwoman, Grace Ellington, has made a home in Scotland, but to escape from the meddling people around her who seem to think she needs to wed right away—because women need saving, right? —she volunteers to journey north to aid a friend in childbirth.

Keir MacKinnon, the younger brother of the MacKinnon clan chief, has been raised to strike fear in people, on and off the battlefield. Trained to uphold MacKinnon law, he has hardened into a lethal warrior. Caught in a Highland blizzard with the feisty Grace, Keir realizes the beautiful woman who saved him can also save his nephew’s life.

Sparks fly when he takes her against her will to his home, and Grace’s courage is put to the ultimate test. Is Keir MacKinnon the passionate, kind man she saved in the Highland blizzard, or is he truly the cruel executioner who seeks to solve all issues by the sword?

 

 

 

 

Heather McCollum is an award winning, historical paranormal and YA romance writer. She earned her B.A. in Biology, much to her English professor’s dismay. She is a member of Romance Writers of America and the Ruby Slippered Sisterhood of 2009 Golden Heart finalists. The ancient magic and lush beauty of Great Britain entrances Ms. McCollum’s heart and imagination every time she visits. The country’s history and landscape have been a backdrop for her writing ever since her first journey across the pond. When she is not creating vibrant characters & magical adventures on the page, she is roaring her own battle cry in the war against ovarian cancer. Ms. McCollum recently slayed the cancer beast and resides with her very own Highland hero, rescued golden retriever & 3 kids in the wilds of suburbia on the mid-Atlantic coast.

 

 

For more info about Heather and her books, please visit her web site at www.HeatherMcCollum.com. She can also be found here:

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3 Replies on The Haunting of Heather McCollum

  • Heather, this is awesome! Glad the spirits were looking out for you. 🙂

    I’ve always believed in the spirit world, but never really had any personal experiences. However, last year, I lost three loved ones within six months (my grandmother and both my beloved dogs). Ever since then, I sometimes “see” a little movement out of the corner of my eye. Just a small, quick blur. Can’t say if it’s something other-wordly, but I always just say hi. My best guess is that it’s my dog Jack. We were closer than close, and I’ve noticed the blur happens a lot near where I keep his ashes. 🙂

  • OMG creepy!!

    I’m pretty sure we’ve got something at my house. I live in a 200 yr old farmhouse. My husband has never heard or seen anything weird but my dad and I both have. At night sometimes it sounds like a radio or tv is on. It’s always really loud when I’m laying down and stops when I sit up. One night, I poked my head into the hallway when I heard it. My dad poked his head out at the same time and asked if there was a tv on somewhere. It was sooo nice to know I wasn’t just imagining things! Now if I hear the noise I tell them to please stop it because I can’t sleep and it always stops.

    There have been a few times when I’ve felt something touch me. Once it felt like something sat on my foot, and once, it felt like my husband had his arm under my pillow and then slowly pulled it out. I turned to him and he had his back to me, dead asleep. I woke him up and he said he it wasn’t him. Pretty sure he thinks I’m imagining it but even I’m not THAT imaginative lol

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