This is the second instalment of a campfire ghost story. See the first part here.
A local legend told that on nights when the grey mist following a big storm settled over Ghostly Point on Shkendang Lake, a moaning could be heard in the trees. A moan that pricked the skin and pulled at the heart. The Ojibwa said it was their leader crying for his only daughter - Laughing Loon, Moong in Ojibwa.
A local legend told that on nights when the grey mist following a big storm settled over Ghostly Point on Shkendang Lake, a moaning could be heard in the trees. A moan that pricked the skin and pulled at the heart. The Ojibwa said it was their leader crying for his only daughter - Laughing Loon, Moong in Ojibwa.
“Moong.
Wenesh aa-zhwebak? Moooohhhng.
G’giigoonke na gamiigoong? Loon. What happened? Loo...oon. Are you fishing on
the lake?”
The
legend said he never stopped calling for Moong, who went onto the lake to fish
one morning and never returned.
Moong
was having such a productive fishing morning she did not notice an angry sky building
in the northwest. Sickly green clouds with the texture of wet campfire ash
loomed over the end of the lake.
A
vicious wind suddenly spun out of the green-grey wall of cloud, shaping itself
into a black funnel. Before Moong could reach for her paddle the funnel slammed
her canoe sideways, chewing it to pieces and sucking everything around it into
its horrible screaming mouth. Minutes later calm returned to the lake but there
was not a trace of Moong, her fish catch or her canoe.
The
legend of Shkendang Lake intensified many years later when the family who
summered at the cabin on Ghostly Point stopped coming. No one knew what
happened to them but it was rumoured their young daughter drowned while
canoeing in the lake.
For
Shainie Garrison, the most important story was the light at the abandoned cabin
and why no one else ever saw it. She was determined to solve the mystery.
The
cabin was off limits to the cottage children of Shkendang Lake. Its dilapidated
condition made it a dangerous place. And, the tales of the Ojibwa princess, and the family
that mysteriously abandoned the cabin, floated in the area’s sub-consciousness.
The
mystery of the light at the cabin had become so much more powerful than her
parent’s prohibitions that Shainie knew she must go to Ghostly Point. The next
morning while everyone slept she would creep out, paddle her canoe across the
bay to investigate why she kept seeing a light that no one else saw.
Ghostly
Point, when seen through the evening mist was appropriately named. But at dawn,
streaks of yellow-red sunlight struck the pink and grey tumble of shoreline
rocks, mixing with the morning blue sparkle of the lake and the leafy greens of
the woods to create a rainbow of warm color.
Shainie
beached her canoe on a strip of sand between the rocks and cautiously climbed
the little hill on which the cabin sat. Where the hill started to flatten out,
the rocky ground disappeared, replaced by a thick, soft blanket of long, brown
pine needles shed by majestic white pines. These elegant sentinels stood rooted
around the rock at all sides of the cabin, thinning out only at the back where
another hill rose steeply to become the high, sheer cliffs that were a feature
of the east side of Shkendang Lake.
The
point was very still and quiet. Shainie imagined she could hear the trees
breathe and the pine needles sigh as they compressed beneath her hiking boots.
The only real sounds were unnerving snaps and creaks coming from the cabin,
presumably caused by the breeze moving through the gaps in the log walls and
breaks in the window panes.
She
took a deep breath and swallowed hard through a dry mouth and tight throat as
she approached the front porch. The steps leading to it had rotted and fallen
away and the porch deck itself was a patchwork of rotting boards. The front
door, once a beautiful work of hand tooled white pine, was battered, hanging
off kilter on one hinge.
Shainie
climbed the porch, stepping gingerly on the firmest-looking spots. Her fingers
touched the door latch just as a lake breeze found its way through a window
crack and rattled something inside the cabin. She jumped back, one foot falling
through the porch with a crash. She caught her balance and her breath and
pulled herself back up, pushing the door open to get a grip on the door frame.
Next week: Inside the cabin.
No comments:
Post a Comment