Day 328
Writing exercise – He counted to one hundred like he had been told, but even when he finished, he couldn’t open his eyes.
…
It was a recurring dream.
He was back when he was a child, in a house that bordered on a forest, one of several houses along a winding, narrow lane.
It was on a holiday with his uncle, his father and mother once more dropping him off for the school holidays while they conducted business in another country.
He had a choice to go with his parents, but he preferred exploring with the other children, since he had no brothers or sisters to play with.
It was mid-afternoon, a warm summer’s day.
It was his turn to cover his eyes and count to 100 while the other children hid.
He would get to 65, and suddenly it seemed to get dark, much like when clouds came and blocked out the sun.
Then, when he reached 100, he would shiver, a cold wind coming from the forest, and in fear, he could not open his eyes.
He did not want to.
“So, you get to this point every time, but no further? Have you tried opening your eyes to see what is happening?”
He had this recurring dream too many times for it not to mean anything, so he had looked up a dream interpreter to visit and find out what it meant.
“Yes, but that’s where I wake up.”
“Have you been to this place in your dreams?”
“Yes, when I was a child, I used to stay there for the holidays. My parents had business elsewhere and thought I would be better off with my uncle.”
“He lived on the edge of the forest?”
“Yes. So did others.”
“Did anything bad happen there?”
“Not as far as I remember?”
“Anyone die?”
“Not while I was there, or at least I don’t think so. I can’t remember such a thing happening, and it’s not something you are likely to forget if it happened.”
And yet, something had happened that had set off this series of dreams.
“I’ll have to think about the circumstances. Was the house you stayed in old?”
“Very.”
“The forest?”
“Spooky, allegedly haunted. I swear, once at night I had seen ghosts.”
“OK. That’s a thing. Did you have any relatives die that you knew or cared about?”
“No. My dad died much later, from what my mother called mysterious circumstances, but there was nothing mysterious about it. He was caught in the middle of a bank robbery, simply the wrong place at the wrong time.”
I remember my mother telling me after the police had come to the door. And another lingering memory of that day, that she didn’t seem all that surprised or distressed. I had thought she was being brave.
“I see.” He glanced down at the note pad on his lap, then wrote a few notes. When he looked up he said, “Would you be receptive to a hypnotism exercise, see if we can jolt what is in there.”
“It’s something then? I’m not going mad?”
“Oh, no. A recent event has likely triggered a deep-down memory, one that you, or your brain, had deemed to be too painful or best left alone. You might want to consider the possibility that it’s buried for a reason before attempting to recover it.”
True, he thought. There were parts of his past that were lost, including a week when he was fifteen, after he was involved in a traffic accident while in Paris with his parents. It was one of the few times he accompanied them because he wanted to see the Eiffel Tower.
He still wasn’t sure if he had or not.
“OK,” he said. “I’ll let you know.”
…
He is not in the forest.
That was evident when, this time while counting, he briefly opened his eyes and saw the floor. Tiles.
“Keep counting, lad,” the gruff voice of a man nearby directed. “And keep those eyes closed, or you will be in trouble.”
He reached a hundred. There was no ‘coming, ready or not’.
“Again,” the gruff voice said. “Slow and steady.” Then much louder, almost in his ear, “Hurry up, 60 seconds, and we’re out of here. No one gets any ideas.”
He could hear people hurrying around but was too afraid to look, and did as he was told, kept counting.
Forty-three, forty-four, forty-five…
“Come on. We’re out of here.”
People leaving, then quiet. He reached a hundred. He wanted to open his eyes but couldn’t.
The man hadn’t asked him to restart. Had he gone? Should he look?
“Hey,” a voice that sounded like his father yelled out.
It was followed by a very loud bang and then screams.
…
He was sitting in a chair in the dream interpreter’s office.
The man was sitting opposite, calm.
“What happened?” he asked. “Did you find out anything?”
“Yes. Do you remember anything from the session?”
“No. I dozed off and then just woke.”
“Yes, you remembered. Hidden away. You were with your father at the time of his death. Wrong place, wrong time. You were there, with him.”
“I cannot remember anything about it. Or him. Only my mother telling me he died.”
“Where were you when she did?”
“Home, I think, no, wait a minute. We were in another city, a hotel room. No, it wasn’t, it was a hospital. I’m sure of it. Hospital.”
“I think if you investigate it further, if you want to, I think there’s a truth there to be found.”
“Or not. There’s a reason it was buried. I think I’ll leave it buried. Nothing good can come of it.”
…
© Charles Heath 2025