Communications From the Other Side. Anthony Quinata
didn’t say anything to anyone about it, but one night when my family was eating dinner, my brother Eddie, who was ten at the time, innocently asked, “Has anyone noticed anything weird about this house?”
“What do you mean by weird?” I asked him.
“Sometimes at night when I’m falling asleep, I’ll hear what sounds like someone running around in the attic,” he said.
“I haven’t heard that,” I responded, “but has anyone noticed that whenever I take a shower I go into my room to dry off?”
“Yeah, I have!” Meridith piped in. “Why do you do that?”
“Because, whenever I’m done taking a shower, the bathroom is freezing!”
“Wow, do you think that this house is haunted?” Meridith asked.
“I don’t know but . . . ,” I started to say when my father interrupted.
“That’s enough of that kind of talk,” he said angrily. “You’re scaring the babies. Besides, there’s no such thing as ghosts.” I remember being surprised that my father would even say such a thing considering the fact that I had heard more ghost stories on Guam than anyplace else we had lived.
Did my father really believe that ghosts don’t exist? If he didn’t, something happened in that house a couple of weeks later that seemed to change his mind. My mother was gone one afternoon to pick up Eddie from school, and when she returned twenty minutes later, my father was sitting on the porch waiting for her with nothing on but his underwear and a T-shirt.
My grandparent’s home was at the end of a secluded dirt road. Even so, my mother was so shocked to see my father like that she asked, “What are you doing outside in your underwear? What if someone sees you like that?”
My father answered her question by saying, “Don’t ever leave me alone in this house again.”
“Why, what happened?” my mother asked, concerned because my father looked so scared.
“This house is weird,” was all my father would say. He refused to say anything more.
It wasn’t until more than thirty years later when he told my sisters what had happened that day. “I was taking a nap in the living room while your mother went to pick up Eddie from school. Suddenly, I woke up when I heard what sounded like someone running back and forth in the attic! I was so scared I sat outside waiting for Mom.”
There were four other houses on the road that led to our home. The first house belonged to an uncle who was never there. I was told he was always traveling. One night I was walking home when I noticed five men, sitting on their haunches, talking quietly, almost as though they were whispering. I was excited because I’d finally have a chance to meet my elusive uncle.
I walked up to them, waving, and saying, “Hi, Uncle! When did you get back?” All of a sudden, all of the men stopped talking and simply stared at me. It wasn’t exactly the response I was expecting, and I stood there looking back at them.
When I finally got the idea that I wasn’t welcome, I backed up, not taking my eyes off of them, nor they me, until I felt the dirt and gravel of the road under my flip flops. I walked home wondering what was up with my uncle. Yeah, he didn’t know me, but I thought he would have been friendlier.
I got home and asked my mother, “When did uncle get back?” She asked me which uncle I was referring to. “The one who lives in the first house,” I told her. She told me that he still hadn’t come back.
I told her about the men I saw and what had happened when I talked to them.” Where did you see them,” she asked, looking more concerned than I thought was necessary.
“Near the banyan (breadfruit) tree in front of his house,” I said, nonchalantly, not thinking anything about it.
“Were you afraid?” she asked.
“No, I just thought he’d be more excited to see me. But if it wasn’t him . . . ”
“I think you saw the taotaomona,” my mother said, quietly. She said this because the people of Guam believe that our ancestors live in the roots of the banyan tree, which rise above the ground, and form what looks like a hut. I didn’t bother telling my father what I saw. After all, didn’t he just tell us that ghosts didn’t exist?
I didn’t think much more afterwards about what had happened that night; although any night that I walked by my uncle’s house, there could have been a five-piece band playing John Philip Sousa songs and I still would have made sure I didn’t look in the direction of that banyan tree!
When “base housing” finally became available for us, my parents rented my grandparent’s house to a “stateside” couple with three kids. I don’t remember much about them except that the husband, Rick, talked about running for a seat in the Guam Senate, and his wife, Jeanne, was a columnist for the local newspaper.
A couple of months after we moved out and they moved in, my mother received a call from Jeanne asking that the shed on the side of the house be taken down. My mother told her that my cousin Roque and I would be happy to do it (not that she had asked either one of us).
While Roque and I were taking the shed apart, my mother and Jeanne talked through the kitchen window. I took a short break to ask Jeanne for a couple of glasses of water. As Jeanne was getting the water, she hesitantly said to my mother, “Rose, may I ask you and Anthony a question? Has anything strange ever happen while you lived in this house?”
She had my interest now, and even though she handed me two glasses of water through the kitchen window, I wasn’t going anywhere!
My mother answered her question with a question. “What do you mean?”
“Well . . . ” Jeanne continued. I could tell she was struggling with whether or not she even wanted to tell us what she was about to say. “ . . . every once in a while we’ll leave and when we come back home, all of the lights will be turned on in the house, the burners in the stove are turned on, and the water in faucets will be running . . . and this happens in the middle of the afternoon! This kept happening and we thought the kids were leaving everything on. So Rick and I would go through the entire house before we’d leave and make sure everything was off. When we’d come back, everything was turned on again!”
My mother and I looked at each other not knowing what to say. Finally my mother said to Jeanne, “Those things didn’t happen when we lived here.”
The fact that we didn’t laugh at her or disbelieve what she was saying seemed to encourage Jeanne to tell us more. “Just the other night I was falling asleep and I heard what sounded like our vacuum cleaner in the living room! So I got up wondering why one of my kids was running the vacuum in the middle of the night. I put my robe on, and as soon as I put my hand on the doorknob, the sound stopped. I opened the door, walked into the living room, and there in the middle of the floor was our vacuum plugged into the wall!”
I was stunned. Nothing like that had ever happened while we lived there, though I thought it would have been exciting if it had. For me it would have proven ghosts do exist no matter what my father said.
“What did you do?” I asked. By this time, Roque had become tired of waiting for me to bring him his glass of water and was walking up to where my mother and I were standing. I handed him his glass and whispered, “Stay here. You’ve got to hear this!” even though I knew that he had not only a healthy respect for the dead and the taotaomona, but also an even healthier fear of them as well.
“I unplugged the vacuum, wrapped the cord around the handle, and put the vacuum back in the closet. I checked in on the kids, and they were all fast asleep.”
I told Roque what Jeanne had just said to my mother and me about the vacuum. Just as I suspected he would, he gulped down his water, handed his glass to Jeanne, and walked back to what remained of the shed. I couldn’t help but smile as I watched him walk away as fast as he could trying not to be obvious about it. I knew he wanted to finish taking down the