31 Ghosts – A Helping Hand

Okay, I’m feeling better tonight than I was last night. Still feel like I’ve been through the wringer and it’s only day two of this trip. Alas…

Dolores’s coworkers never had anything bad to say about her. They really didn’t say much about her at all. She dependably handled the fourteenth floor of The Meridian since it opened five years ago. Never a complaint against her. Never late, never sick, never complained.

Her tireless work ethic hadn’t gone unnoticed. She’d been offered numerous opportunities for better assignments – “Would you like an assistant on your floor, Dolores?” “The company is opening a new property – very fancy. Would you like to work at that property?”

But she didn’t. She liked her routine. If anything, that’s the thing her coworkers couldn’t understand.

But none of that mattered to Dolores.

She punched in on Monday, October 20, changed into her uniform, re-stocked her cart and took the service elevator up to the fourteenth floor. Room 1403 was a mess – the guests clearly had too much fun and too poor aim. Dolores had pretty much seen it all, though, and while certainly a drag that early into her shift, it didn’t even make the top 50 worst rooms she’d cleaned.

Room 1410 and 1411 – adjoining rooms – were clearly ground zero for an epic bachelorette party. From the confetti cake explosion complete with icing welded to the walls, to hair extensions hither and thither and discarded false eyelashes like errant mascaraed moths these two rooms together sapped Dolores of all pep she had remaining. And that’s not even talking about how hard it was to remove the lipstick kisses on every mirror – seriously, what bulletproof material was that lipstick made of?

Dolores dragged through the reasonably clean 1412 – mostly just towels and sheets. Room 1413 was vacant, and 1414 and 1415 were likewise low-effort rooms – as if the universe had taken pity on her after the bachelorette bomb.

But when she tapped her keycard to 1416, she started grinning before the lock turned green.

As she pushed the door open, the television turned on by itself and immediately changed to Music Choice Pop Latino and the propulsive beat of “Soy Yo” by Bomba Estéreo started booming through the room.

“Ay, so that’s the mood you’re in?” she said aloud as she danced into the room, closing the door behind her.

As if in response, the rumpled bedding began rolling up itself and even the sheets released their grip on the mattress and joined the comforter on the ground. “Gracias, espooky,” she smiled as she collected the dirty linen. Casting the fresh sheets across the bed, as she tucked in the side she was on, the other side perfectly mirrored her movements with the sheets. “You’re so good, espooky!” As she vacuumed, the lights in the room pulsed to the rhythm of “Mi Swing es Tropical” as it played through the TV and Dolores danced behind the vacuum. The clean towels she’d set by the bathroom door replaced the dirty ones which helpfully gathered in a heap by the door. “Gracias otra vez, espooky,” she said again, her smile wide.

The song changed to “Mexico” by Mexican Institute of Sound, the beat infectious and undeniable. As Dolores dusted near the window, the curtains sashayed back and forth in time with the beat. “Muy bien, espooky, you’ve got rhythm.”

Just then, someone cleared their throat in the doorway.

Dolores turned; her supervisor stood in the doorway.

The curtains abruptly stopped, and the television turned off, the room falling into silence.

“Are you training someone new?” her supervisor said with a raised eyebrow.

“Don’t worry,” Dolores smiled. “They’re union.”

31 Ghosts – What Dies In Vegas…

I’m ensconced in my room in Vegas on the fourteenth floor. My streak of absolutely terrible views is unbroken. But I’m also feeling a bit under the weather, so I’m going to keep it short tonight so I can go to sleep. …With the lights on, after writing this…

I love Las Vegas.

You might think someone who died alone in a hotel room with no one there when he died, no one mourning him or even remembering him… You’d think I’d hate this place. But, oh, you’re so wrong. I don’t even remember the exact room I died in. It doesn’t matter, because that room more than likely doesn’t exist anymore.

This hotel I haunt, the Aurora Grand Las Vegas, is a pretty recent place – opened in 2023. Two gleaming 26-story towers and the latest in garish carpeting and amenities, built to attract a high-end clientele with an 18-hole golf course built by esteemed golf course builder blah blah blah blah blah.

But until 2019 it was the much more modest, The Solara, which itself was a rebranded version of The New Starlight, which was a renovated version of The Starlite that first lit its neon shooting star flying out of a martini glass in 1981. Oh, the disco and coke…

Did I die in one of those iterations of this hotel? Hard to say. Maybe it was the Desert Comet that replaced the unassuming Silver Palm that first stood on this spot back in 195—you know what? It doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter because no one remembers. Or cares.

Oh, spare me the YouTube Las Vegas histories, the museums, the shut-ins who keep yellowed clippies from long-shuttered newspapers about gangster hits and who lost which license. Those are few and far between. And no one—no one – remembers a man in a hotel room that died alone. It took them days, weeks to find his – my – body.

Or maybe they found it the next day when maid service came – I don’t remember. No one does.

And I love that.

I love the anonymity of this place. I love the labyrinthine hallways and alleyways that would give Sarah Winchester an anxiety attack#. That aforementioned garish carpet that plays tricks with your eyes and makes you question whether there was a shadow in that spot just a second ago…

And you’ll never hear that room 1416 of the Aurora Grand Las Vegas is the most haunted room in this ever-changing city, and I love that. I’ve watched ghost shows where geeks with gadgets travel to The Most Haunted Room In The World and then dither about with spirit boxes and temperature measurements for ratings.

No one knows I’m here – no one expects it. This room didn’t exist, say, before the Pandemic. It can’t possibly be haunted. “Hey, why is the AC on 68 but it feels a lot colder over here?”

Why indeed.

I’m not going to prostrate myself for some purported psychic or knock three times like a trained show pony. I’m beyond unexpected – I am the least thing on anyone’s mind. Like these people who just came in the door…

“Will you look at this place!” he says.

“Oh wow, John, this is so fancy!” she responds.

“Huh, the view isn’t anything to write home about…” he sounds disappointed as he surveys the roofof the casino out the window.

“Well, we won’t be spending much time in here anyway – I have a full itinerary of shows to go to, and there’s the spa… and of course we’re going to gamble—but not too much!”

“…Jane… did you just lock the door?”

“How could I?”

“It just locked… on its own…”

“Maybe it’s an automatic lock. This place is so fancy.”

The television turns on and they jump at the high volume I left it on.

And then the lights go out.

31 Ghosts – Our Song

This is another one of Akilah’s ideas, though this one I so vehemently refused to write that I didn’t even jot it down in my “Ideas” notebook. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a great story idea. Well, really, that’s the problem – it’s too good. I knew that I would be a crying mess writing it and… I didn’t want to put myself through that. Until I did.
Now, this revolves around a specific song – Blind Pilot’s “3 Rounds and a Sound”. You don’t need to know the song. If you’ve never heard of it, then make it any song that synchronizes with the rhythm of your heart. If you want to hear it, here’s a link to the song on YouTube.

“You know we don’t have a song,” June said, her head in my lap on the couch as I played with her dark hair.

“Do we need one?” I asked. This was well-trodden territory. We could never agree on a song – she was pop, I was indie; she was sentimental, I was practical. We’d navigated the philosophical differences during the five years we’d been dating. The notion of “Our Song” had come up quite a few times. In fact, I think June has an iTunes playlist for “Our Songs” – not realistic ones, but all the tracks we’d bandy back and forth without really intending them to really be our song. Like June once jokingly (was she joking?) suggested Fall Out Boy’s “Sugar, We’re Goin Down” (we might have been in a rough patch), to which I responded we should use The Yeah Yeah Yeah’s “Maps.”

My question suggested I was willing to run this track again, but June turned to look directly at me – this was different. “Theo? You just proposed to me. Yes, we need our song!”

“You have a compelling point,” I acknowledged. “But we’ve tried to figure out ‘Our Song’ for as long as we’ve been dating.”

“I know. I even have the playlist…”

See? I knew it!

We were both quiet, thinking about the impossibility of choosing a song.

“Okay, I have a crazy idea…,” I said.

“Is it crazier than when you asked me out on a dare that first night?” I leaned down and kissed her forehead.

“It worked, didn’t it?”

She smiled back at me then asked, “Crazy idea…?”

“Pandora. We fire it up, put ‘our song’ in the prompt and abide by whatever it gives us,” I suggested.

“That’s the stupidest idea I’ve ever heard. I love it. But log out, clear your cookies – I don’t want your indie obsession to influence the algorithm.”

“Fair,” I agreed and reached for my laptop. Logged out of Pandora, cleared my cache, dumped my cookies and brought the app back up. I gave it the prompt and hit play.

A plaintive guitar strumming started, slow and even. The singer started, “They’re playing our song… they’re playing our song…”

I stared at June who stared back at me with wide eyes. “They’re playing our song?”

The singer went on, “…can you see the light…. Can you hear the hum… of our song. I hope they get it right, I hope we dance tonight, before we get it wrong…”

By the end of that line, we were both standing in the living room of our tiny apartment, on our threadbare second-hand carpet, my arms naturally encircled June’s waist, her arms around my neck.

“…Blooming up from the ground, Three rounds and a sound, Like whispering, ‘You know me’, ‘You know me’….”

When the last note faded, the room was quiet except for the hum of the fridge and the sound of our breathing. We separated enough to look into each other’s eyes, June spoke first: “I guess we found our song.”

“We sure did.” I smiled and then kissed her.

***

There are words you don’t ever want to have to hear from your partner. Right at the top of that list are “lump,” “malignant,” “inoperable.” When they do, the world shrinks, the music stops, the focus collapses into the immediate.

The fifteenth wedding anniversary is crystal or a watch. Maybe it’s a round enough anniversary to talk about vow renewal or going to France like you’ve always wanted. It shouldn’t be… it shouldn’t ever fucking be making memorial service arrangements, deciding between burial or cremation, figuring out how to say goodbye. It should never, ever, ever be that.

There’s no rhythm at the end, when breathing stops, when the last beat of the heart has sounded, when the joy drains from your soul.  

The service was a blur. I remember moments, but I couldn’t give you more than that. Liz, June’s best friend, was my grief sherpa and led me through the motions but my brain couldn’t parse the idea that June was gone.

Gone.

“Theo, there’s a casserole in the fridge,” Liz explained. “You need to eat, don’t forget.”

I didn’t respond.

“Theo!” She snapped. “You need to eat.”

“I know,” I said, but my tone belied my hopelessness.

“Theo… you have to…” she cocked her head. “What’s that… music?” Then she went pale.

The plaintive guitar notes reached my ear and I realized why she went pale.

“They’re playing our song… they’re playing our song…can you see the light…. Can you hear the hum… of our song. I hope they get it right, I hope we dance tonight, before we get it wrong…”

I stood and walked to the living room where the song – our song – played from our stereo speakers.

“…Blooming up from the ground, Three rounds and a sound, Like whispering, ‘You know me’, ‘You know me’….”

The stereo was turned off.

I let the tears flow completely unchecked. I choked back my sobs long enough to say, “I love you June.”

***

In the beginning, getting out of bed was an act of will. Eventually, it became a habit.

Breathe, coffee, days, weeks, months…

I moved… certainly not “on,” but maybe “through.”

I tried to give myself space, to try new things – and I did – but I was always acutely aware of the empty spot in my chest.

I tried dating again. Liz even set me up with a friend of hers – a woman who teaches kindergarten at the same school. Elaine. She was nice – smart, pretty, I liked her smile. But she wasn’t June, and that wasn’t fair to Elaine.

I embraced the term, “working on myself” whenever someone would try to push me to date again. Eventually, they stopped pushing.

I mean, it’s true – I was “working on myself.” I started bicycling again. I took up kayaking. I bought myself a drum kit and terrorized the neighbors.

Sooner than I had expected, my coworkers stopped walking on eggshells around me. To be fair, some changed jobs or left the department, and the new folks had no idea what had happened, and I realized that wasn’t a bad thing.

I started traveling a lot for work and that led to new friendships – I even learned Mandarin. Before I knew it, I was jokingly referring to the color of my thinning hair as “salt and pepper” and insisting I had laugh lines and not wrinkles. Of course I imagined June teasing me, but it didn’t have the gut-punch after a decade; I was used to the dull ache of well-worn grief.

What I wasn’t used to was the twinge behind my right eye, sharp and bright. I was in the break room and I had just taken a sip from my second cup of coffee for the day. Sound faded out. I realized I dropped my mug, but didn’t hear or feel it hit the ground… then realized I had hit the ground and blackness swallowed my vision.

I saw myself in the ambulance, in the trauma center. I heard “aneurysm,” “near-instantaneous,” “painless.” I saw the doctor tell Liz there were no signs. Nothing anyone could have done.

And then darkness again. Cold, empty, darkness.

Then the sound of a single guitar strumming chords…

“They’re playing our song… they’re playing our song…can you see the light…. Can you hear the hum… of our song. I hope they get it right, I hope we dance tonight, before we get it wrong…”

June stood in front of me in her favorite dress with the black cats on it.

My mouth moved but I couldn’t form words.

“Are you going to stand around and look stupid or are you going to dance with me?” She grinned.

My arms naturally encircled June’s waist, her arms around my neck.

“…Blooming up from the ground, Three rounds and a sound, Like whispering, ‘You know me’, ‘You know me’….”

“I love you, June.”

“I love you, Theo.”