(Effectively mitigate silly questions about this story. Start here!)
Guess who doesn’t care if you’re pooping?
Ghost Child Mary, that’s who.
I’m sitting in the restroom in the men’s dressing room at the theater. I’m taking my time, mulling the Obi-Wan-point-five charcoal graffiti revelation, when Ghost Child Mary walks through the wall. I jump, scream in the manliest fashion, then scoot back on the toilet seat, leaning forward, covering everything.
Ghost Child Mary says, “Mama says you better get ready for spooky consequences!”
She stands there in her pool of low-lying fog. Looking at me with her dark, empty eye sockets. Like I’m supposed to reply. So I say,
“Thank you. And please tell your mother I say thank you, as well.”
Ghost Child Mary busts out laughing at this, walking back through the wall by which she entered. I realize I’m holding my breath. I let it out, slow.
She pops her head back through the wall, saying,
“Keep poopin’!”
I yelp, farting, and she’s laughing as she disappears through the wall again.
“Ghost Child Mary, you have to give me privacy!” I say.
The door to the men’s room opens a crack; from outside, Judy says,
“Who you talking to, Ed?”
I’m silent for a long moment. This situation is creepy to begin with, an explanation of what just happened will only make things worse. I can still hear Ghost Child Mary’s laughter echoing, fading away. I guess Judy doesn’t hear it.
In spite of all that, in the pressure of my long moment of silence I say, “ … Ghosts?”
“Huh,” says Judy. “Maybe you should sit down when you’re offstage, Ed.”
The door closes and it’s a long time before I’m relaxed enough to finish sculpting the Trumps.
It’s later, as I’m wandering the premises running my lines that I realize: Judy may not yet know that I know they saved me from Dolly Lurker, and that she halted Laurabell-Beaujolais Grausamkeit’s weird sacrificial ritual. This makes me want to ask Judy questions.
Of course, now I can’t find her anywhere.
Other cast members start to arrive. I’m checking a text on my phone in the middle of the breezeway over the fountains when Kelly and Grace, who play nurses in the show, walk by. Both of them are gifted human beings, with kind souls and brilliant minds; they also happen to have very attractive asses. And I admit, my eyes have questions and want answers.
Ghost Child Mary pops her head out of the column next to me to shout, “I see you checking out those booties!”
The nurses stop, turning to me.
Ghost Child Mary is gone.
“Excuse me, Edward?” says Kelly, her eyes narrowed, a half-smile on her lips that tells me I’m in trouble because I have no idea where this is going. They’re walking back toward me.
“That was a ghost,” I say. Because, what the fuck else can I say?
“A ghost that talks about our asses?” says Grace.
“She was commenting because I was looking,” I say.
There is a long silence after I speak.
Grace laughs.
Kelly smacks her on the arm, they both laugh, walking away, Kelly saying, “Do some sit-ups or something so we get to ogle you right back.”
Ghost Child Mary giggles from inside the column. Kelly and Grace turn to me, concern in their eyes.
“It was the ghost,” I say.
“Spooky spooky spooky!” says Ghost Child Mary, still inside the column.
“How the fuck did you do that, Edward?” Kelly says.
“It’s Burton,” Grace says. “Burton, where are you hiding?” They’re looking behind some old flats.
From inside the old broken-down piano that lives—and molts—on the breezeway, Ghost Child Mary says, “My name’s not Burton!”
Kelly and Grace scream and run away, Kelly calling, “Not funny, Edward!”
“Ghost Child Mary, you are not helping,” I say.
She says nothing.
Later still, during rehearsal, I step aside to make way for the nurses as they run on for a number; Kelly and Grace point at me, squinting, Kelly says, “Keep the ghosts away, Ed.”
I execute a Restoration bow, knocking an old box off a table, spilling its contents into the entrance to Judy’s office. Which is a certain method for summoning Judy. If only I’d thought of it when there was time to ask her questions.
“Looks like you’re helping me clean this up, Ed!” she says, and I drop to one knee, scooping the papers into the box. “You’ve got some time, Ed. See if you can’t put those in order.” Judy waves at the box as she heads off to work more of her awesomeness.
I look into the box. It’s all files filled with papers, programs. They’re paperclipped in place. It’s not a huge mess, I can do this. Full disclosure: if the files had all spilled everywhere, with loose papers going crazy, this task would take me hours.
I sit on the closest couch and organize the files; the earliest year is 1967. It’s got a program from their very first production: South Pacific! I glance through it, then tuck it into the file and get them all in order. I’m pretty pleased with myself as I set the fully organized box on the floor before me.
Something is nagging me, though. I take the South Pacific program out again and look more closely. There, about three-quarters of the way through the program, is an ad:
Hillebrandt Flowers
Every Bloom for the Discerning Theatregoer
Local Rates for Time Capsule
Please call Betsy!
The phone number is surely long out of service, but what’s this about a time capsule?
Betsy Hillebrandt, though—I think that’s the lady from the articles about the missing girls. Why did I think her name was Hildebrand? I head back to my dressing room to check the spelling, digging the mucky-looking plastic bag out of my backpack. It’s folded at an awkward diagonal. Taking the article out, I see a flash of white in the Ziploc and look again.
A curl of white paper sticks to the inside of the bag. It looks like a price tag. It wasn’t there before. I pull on it, tearing the corner. It’s a larger piece than I thought. I reach in again, taking care as I peel and lift the paper away from the plastic. In doing so, I understand why the bag doesn’t smell like muck at all:
The bag was painted to look like this—inside and out—and the piece of paper was painted into the inside. Careful camouflage. On the unpainted side of the paper is a message:
in my thought
every word lied
he was first
There was a strange symbol beneath the writing: a horizontal line with an arrow leading up from it to touch a circle. It did not look familiar.
“Mama says I should leave you alone when you’re pooping,” Ghost Child Mary says from right behind me. I do a kind of Don Knotts electric chair scream/wiggle, jumping up to turn around. I’m facing the door to the dressing room.
I can’t see her. “Ghost Child Mary?” I say.
“She says you need to figure that out, though,” her voice comes from behind me again; I whirl, all goosebumpy, and she’s inside the mirror. “Because the window shuts.”
Ghost Child Mary walks out of the reflected dressing room into the ensemble area, and the light changes out there; it’s cleaner, the light is not fluorescent; I hear an orchestra striking up Bloody Mary, and a bunch of sailors I don’t recognize go running past. Hairstyles different.
She walks out of sight, and the light in the reflected ensemble area fades to present-day.
Holy shit. I think Ghost Child Mary was here in 1967.
I think she might have been in South Pacific.
A bubble of weird surfaces in my mind:
Is the show the thing that brings Jingles and Dolly out to play?