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Becoming a Ghost by Melissa Flores Anderson

Oscar picked the castle for our last night of a 10-day trip to Ireland. We’d worn on each

other, like the ragged curtains that adorned the arched window looking out on the estate, and

Oscar wouldn’t stop complaining about the cold.

“What did you expect?” I asked. “Did you think they were going to have double-paned

windows and central heating?”

“It’s, like, $500 a night,” he said. “There should be heat, at least.”

We climbed into the four-poster bed and under the thick duvet, the linens heavy with the

scent of peat smoke and the sour lingering body order of a former visitor, and faced away from

each other.

I awoke in the middle of the night to a howl creeping through the room, the shutters

banging outside. Cold dug into my skin. I curled against Oscar and siphoned off his warmth.

In the morning, we packed our things. Oscar left the bags on the wet ground leaning

against the bark of a birch tree. He held out his phone to take three selfies with the castle in the

background. Slipping his phone into his back pocket, he collected the bags and complained about

mine.

“What the fuck did you put in your bag, Casey? I can hardly lift it.”

“I didn’t put anything in it. Maybe it’s that giant bottle of Irish Whiskey you had to buy.”

We both knew it wasn’t. He’d finished off that bottle halfway through the trip.

My bag weighed 10 lbs. over the limit at check-in. I asked the attendant to weigh it again.

I had packed exactly the same things coming as going.

At home when I opened the bag, a rush of wind came out and I felt that cold seep into my

skin again, burrowing beneath my fingernails and making my teeth ache. I lifted out a pair of

yoga pants and a T-shirt to find them shredded and wet.

“This your fault for putting the bags down in the mud at that fucking castle,” I said.

“Don’t blame me. Baggage handlers must have fucked with your stuff.”

Too jetlagged to fight, I left it all in a heap and we went to sleep, the air in my Phoenix

apartment arid and still.

I woke up an hour later, with a start, like in Ireland, the chill running deep into my pores.

I shook Oscar awake.

“Do you feel that?” I asked. “The cold?”

He grumbled and turned toward the wall. “Go back to sleep, Casey.”

I thought I saw something gray move in the corner. I sat quiet, with the eerie sense of

eyes on me I couldn’t see. I left the apartment, seeking out the sun on my skin, and walked to the

corner market in a pair of old flip flops.

When I got home, Oscar sat on the couch and started on the remnants of his bottle of

whiskey. Even before the trip, his drinking had been getting on my nerves, but I’d tried to hold it

in. Seemed unfair to take him along with me to a country known for its alcohol and then needle

him not to imbibe.

“Don’t you have work early tomorrow?” I asked.

He didn’t usually stay at my place when he had to work, but now he couldn’t drive.

“Damn, Casey. I just woke up. Give me a break.”

I didn’t say more.


Oscar crawled out of bed before the sun rose and when the lock clicked, I heard the echo

of the howls and the cold grabbed me again. I rolled into his spot on my mattress, to soak in his

warmth still trapped under the comforter. I dozed and dreamt of a peat bog we had visited in

Kildare. I sat up in bed and the sweet smell of decay filled my room, like I was back in the bog,

and I thought I might still be dreaming.

As I got up to go the kitchen for coffee, I saw it, hovering over a chair. A gray figure, like

a mist. I stumbled back into the wall, my hands pressed against the spot where Oscar had kissed

me the first night I’d brought him home three months before.

“Casey,” a voice whispered and I found myself unable to move, as though the cold had

frozen me in place. “Casey, do not be afraid.”

“I’m just dreaming, right? This has to be a dream.”

Cold wind ebbed around the floor, like weeds grabbing at my ankles. And then I knew

what it was. I’d read the myths as a little girl.

“Please. I don’t want to die. I don’t want anyone I love to die.”

I knew Banshees were the harbingers of death, an early warning signal of what was to

come.

“You’ve got it wrong, Casey,” the voice whispered and now I could see the features of a

woman, withered around the eyes, with teeth missing, leathery skin. “I came to protect you from

it. The one who sleeps beside you will only destroy you.”

“Is Oscar sick. Is he going to die?”

The banshee shook her head and exhaled a cold breath.

“They always get it wrong. We don’t bring death. We warn when two people should be

separated. And when our warnings go unheeded, chaos can ensue.”

The banshee took on a more solid form and now I could see she had dark hair and the

ends of her clothes were tied up with strips of mine.

“Did you follow me all the way here? Why not say something in Ireland?”

“You weren’t ready to hear it yet. But now you know that cold you’ve been feeling, that’s

not love.”

Oscar texted me that afternoon. I didn’t respond back. He called and I didn’t answer.

When he stopped by the apartment, I didn’t open the door. The longer, I ignored him, the more

the banshee faded away and the warmth returned to my flesh.

That is how I became a ghost.


Originally published by Bear Creek Gazette 2022



Melissa Flores Anderson is a Latinx Californian and an award-winning journalist, who lives in her hometown with her young son and husband. Her creative work has been published in more than two dozen journals or anthologies, and she received a 2023 Best of the Net nomination for CNF. She is a reader/editor with Roi Fainéant Press. She has a co-authored novelette, “Roadkill,” forthcoming with Emerge Literary Journal. Follow her on Twitter @melissacuisine or IG @theirishmonths. Read her work at melissafloresandersonwrites.com.



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